Authors: China Mieville
48
Spilling Certain Beans
The bus puttered to a halt beside a church made of ancient, broken personal stereos and speakers.
“Can you wait?” Murgatroyd said to Rosa and Conductor Jones. “I and…our contact, may need a lift to the bridge to speak to the Propheseers. And Miss Resham, of course.”
“I really think they should come,” Deeba started to say, but Murgatroyd ignored her. He beckoned Deeba and Hemi, who followed him into the dark streets by the side of the moil church.
Deeba looked back again doubtfully at Jones.
“Go on,” he said gently as she went. “We’ll see you in a bit.”
Murgatroyd led Deeba and Hemi past an ancient-looking pile of rubbish bags and trash into a concrete cul-de-sac. The UnSun drew sharp shadow-lines across the little lot, and put its farthest corners into darkness.
There was silence for several seconds. In that quiet, Deeba could just hear a faint tireless whispering.
What is that?
she mouthed at Hemi.
“It’s the sound of the Smog,” he murmured. They were hearing it coil and unfold, a few streets away.
A voice emerged from the shadows.
“I’m here.”
Deeba and Hemi jumped. Deeba dropped her bag.
“Mr. Murgatroyd,” the unseen speaker said. “I got your message. You told me to come alone: I’m here. You told me not to tell a soul. You specifically told me not to tell my
partner.
I don’t like deceit, Mr. Murgatroyd, but I’ve given you the benefit of the doubt. Now, prove to me that I should have done.”
Mr. Brokkenbroll stalked into view.
“Deeba Resham.” He nodded to Deeba and Hemi. “Young man.”
“The Unbrellissimo,” Hemi muttered. “Wow.”
Curdle scampered behind Deeba’s feet and cowered as Brokkenbroll approached, his trench coat sweeping. Behind him came a billow of fabric and the
skritch
of thin metal as his entourage of broken umbrellas fidgeted in the shadow.
Brokkenbroll folded his arms. “I’m glad to see you again. Is everything alright? Is your friend, the Shwazzy…did it not work?”
“No, no, she’s fine,” Deeba said. “It worked brilliantly. Thanks so much. That’s not why I’m here.”
Brokkenbroll raised an eyebrow.
“I’m glad she’s well,” he said. “But I’m mystified. And as you can understand—a little
busy.
The fight we find ourselves in has been difficult. So forgive me if I keep this brief.”
“You see, Deeba?” Mr. Murgatroyd said. “You understand why we’re here. It’s the Unbrellissimo who’s being used by this…imposter…worse than any of us. We don’t yet know why. But he has the right to know what’s going on. And, more than any of us, he might be able to do something about it.”
“Mr. Brokkenbroll,” Deeba said. She took the sheet of Wraithtown paper from her bag, and held it out to him. “You should see this.”
He fiddled with it for some seconds, squinting past the fluttering specter-fonts. As he made out what it said, Deeba saw his face grow hard under the brim of his hat.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I don’t know what he’s doing, and I don’t know why. I don’t know who he is. But the man who says he’s Unstible, isn’t. He can’t be, see? Plus I don’t know what it is he’s giving your unbrellas. I was thinking…maybe it’s like poison, slow-acting, and they’re going to get sick or something? I mean I know it works at the moment, but you don’t know what it’ll do in a few weeks.”
Brokkenbroll said nothing. Deeba grew nervous.
“I mean, it might even be that whatever he wants to do isn’t even bad,” she gabbled. “But, it’s just…it probably isn’t great, because, I mean, why’d he lie? I don’t see why he’d tell everyone he’s Unstible when…he…isn’t…”
Her voice petered out. Still Brokkenbroll was silent. He read and reread the paper.
“So…” said Hemi. He and Deeba shared a glance.
“So,” Deeba said. “What should we do? Because, I mean I haven’t been here long, but it don’t look to me like it’s going that well. And if you can think of something to do…”
“Why did you come?” Brokkenbroll said at last. “
Why
would you make that journey?”
There was a long silence.
“I was worried,” Deeba said. Her voice grew quieter and quieter. “I found out something was weird, and I couldn’t…I just…I wanted to make sure UnLondon was okay.”
“You did the right thing,” Brokkenbroll said eventually. “I don’t like being made a fool of.”
“You can see why I called this meeting,” Murgatroyd said. “Why the minister insisted on getting to the bottom of this.”
“I need to know everything,” the Unbrellissimo said urgently, leaning suddenly down towards Deeba and making her jump. “I need to know what you know, how you worked it out, how you got hold of this.” He waved the printout, leaving a brief trail of spirit-paper.
“If we’re going to turn the tables I have to know exactly where we stand. We may not have much time.”
Deeba told him everything. How she had been curious, and researched the Armets, and found the RMetS, and talked to them. How her suspicions had grown with news of Unstible’s death. How she had tried to talk herself out of them, had not been able to, had eventually crossed over, and at last found proof in Wraithtown.
Brokkenbroll and Murgatroyd listened avidly.
“But how did you cross over?” Murgatroyd interrupted at one point. “There can’t be more than a handful of people in London who know how.”
“I read it somewhere,” Deeba said. “It was sort of a lucky guess.”
“But
how
?”
“I found a way in a library.” She didn’t explain further.
When Deeba finished, Brokkenbroll and Murgatroyd both stood silent for some time.
“That’s everything?” Murgatroyd said.
“Yeah.”
“It’s not too late,” Brokkenbroll said. “But whoever this man is, he’s going to realize soon that we’re onto him.”
“The liquid does seem to work,” Murgatroyd said.
“Oh, it works. It does what it’s supposed to. But as she says, perhaps it does something else as well. Obviously he has some other plan. We have to decide how to proceed. Deeba, Hemi…” Brokkenbroll knelt before them. “Who knows about this?”
They looked at each other.
“No one,” she said. “Only us here. Oh, and I said something to Obaday Fing. But…” Deeba made a
hmph
noise. “I don’t think he believed me.”
“Just them?” Brokkenbroll said. “No one else?”
Deeba shook her head. The Unbrellissimo smiled slowly.
“Good,”
he said.
He loomed suddenly and threw back his arms and spread out like a bat-wing shadow. For a second it looked as if he himself were a broken umbrella, his arms and legs crooked metal, his overcoat taut as a canopy, and then he swooped down on Deeba and grabbed her so fast he took her breath away. He bundled her into his grip and she could not scream or speak or even breathe, and everything went dark.
49
Trussed
Deeba woke to voices.
“…was that? Not too much?”
“No, it was very good. ‘We don’t have time to waste!’ I liked that.” She heard laughter.
It was Brokkenbroll and Murgatroyd. Cautiously, Deeba opened her eyes a crack, but saw nothing. For a moment she thought it was night: then she realized that she was wearing a blindfold. She shook herself experimentally. She could not move.
“Deeba!” It was Hemi, speaking right behind her.
“Hemi,” she whispered. “Where are you? I think I’m tied up.”
“You are,” he said. “You’re tied to
me.
”
Now she could feel his spine against hers, his slight wriggles. They were tied back-to-back, sitting on the cold pavement.
“Murgatroyd grabbed me,” Hemi whispered. “While the unbrella man grabbed you. I can’t believe what you got me into!”
Deeba’s heart was racing. For a moment she thought she was afraid. Then she realized that she was, not surprisingly, but that more than that, she was
furious.
“They tricked me,” she hissed, struggling hard and ineffectually. “Brokkenbroll’s
in
on it. They must’ve been trying to find out what we know. I’m such an
idiot.
Oh man. What are they going to do? Have you heard anything?”
“No. Just that they’ll find out quickly—I don’t know what they’ll find out—and Murgatroyd said he was on a schedule, and that people were counting on him. Hush a minute, I’m trying to…”
Something tugged at Deeba’s face. She stifled a scream, then wrinkled her nose at a sudden smell of off milk.
“Curdle?” she said. Curdle clamped her blindfold in its opening and tugged, pulling it down and uncovering her eyes. “Good carton,” she whispered. It shook enthusiastically and rolled onto her lap.
Brokkenbroll and Murgatroyd were talking, by the wall. They were lit by the dancing orange of a fire that Deeba could hear behind her. She thought she heard another sound, too. Very faintly, the padding of footsteps. They circled a little way away.
“Can you hear that?” she whispered. “Who’s by the fire?”
“I can’t see squat,” muttered Hemi. “I’m blindfolded.”
Curdle gnawed at the ropes fastened around them, but its cardboard flaps made no impact at all.
“We got to get out of here,” Deeba said. “We got to warn the Propheseers. We got to warn everyone. Whatever that fake Unstible’s doing, this lot are in on it.”
“Hello,” said a voice. Brokkenbroll and Murgatroyd had seen her, and were walking over. Curdle froze, lay hidden between Deeba and Hemi.
“How did you get your blindfold off?” Brokkenbroll continued. “You’re awake. That’s excellent. There are some things we need to ask you.”
“Who have you told?”
“I already said,” Deeba said. “No one.”
“Maybe I should go back to the market,” Murgatroyd said. “Have a word with that tailor.”
“Not a bad thought,” Brokkenbroll said.
“Leave him alone!” said Deeba. “I already told you, he didn’t believe me.”
“Well, we’ll see, won’t we?” Brokkenbroll said. “You see, the thing is, in not very long at all, it won’t make any difference. The unbrellas are still coming through every day, and those fools are lining up like baby birds to take them from me. Within a few weeks, everyone’ll have one, and by then whatever you know or think you know and whatever anyone believes or doesn’t won’t make an iota of difference. But I dislike being preempted. As do my associates. So we’re keen to make sure that nothing complicates matters.”
Deeba stared at Brokkenbroll furiously and resolved not to say a word to him. He raised an eyebrow.
“Well,” he said. “That particular expression you’re wearing is almost alarming. I’d be intimidated. If I weren’t, you know,
incomparably more powerful than you.
”
He snarled the last words, suddenly lunging at her. Deeba could not help but jump, which enraged her even more.
“It’s so foolish,” Brokkenbroll said. “This whole thing was unnecessary. I did you so many favors!” He sounded seriously aggrieved.
“It was me who convinced my associate that it would be in our interests to let your friend, the bloody Shwazzy, go.
I
persuaded it to leave her. Went to some trouble to put on that little performance for you. Did you both a favor! At some effort, I might add. Made sure that little smoggler took all her memories with it, when it left, so there’d be no need for her—or you—to worry about UnLondon anymore. We took her completely out of the picture. I really don’t see the point in doing away with people if you don’t have to.
“Besides, as I said to my partner—who believe me took some convincing, and who expended quite some effort on checking that everything was safe—everyone should have benefited. You got your friend back, uninterested in dangerous topics anymore. Your friend got to live. You get to feel good about having helped save her—so don’t say I didn’t give you anything. And
I
got to impress the idiots around me with my powers over the nasty smoke, so they put their trust in me. Which in turn benefits my partner. You were supposed to be out of the picture, and perfectly happy. You never, ever would have had to bother us, or we you.
“Now
why,
after I go to all that trouble to sort all that out for everyone, did you have to ignore it all and come back? You had
absolutely no need.
”
There was a silence. Deeba stared at him pugnaciously until he sighed and looked away.
“He’s sort of got a point,” Hemi whispered. “Why did you come back?”
“Shut up,” said Deeba. “Listen.”
“We should get a move on,” Murgatroyd said to Brokkenbroll. “I’ve got to get back, report to my superiors. Rawley was pretty worried by her letter, you can imagine. She wants reassuring that everything’s in hand. Thanks for telling us who she was. I had to spin her some nonsense about tracking her movements from the post office.” The two men laughed.
“How is it all up there?” Brokkenbroll said.
Murgatroyd shrugged modestly.
“It seems to be working well,” he said. “Our LURCH program is proceeding excellently. It was hard building those trans-odd chimneys that send the fumes directly through to here, but worth the effort. My boss is getting lots of kudos for cutting down on pollution up our end.” They both laughed. “Some people are beginning to wonder if all this might mean
Prime Minister
Rawley one day. She values her relationship with you and your partner immensely.”
“Yes, I’m sure we’ll do more work together.”
“I know it’s not so easy for it to make its way over…”
“Oh, it does when it has to.”
“Absolutely. Now, I do have to report back that we’ve got the girl. She could have thrown a real spanner in things here.”
“I’m sure we’ve sorted it all out, but just in case, we’ll know everything she knows in a minute,” Brokkenbroll said. “We’ll know exactly who they’ve told. Did you hear that?” he said to Deeba, his voice chillingly gentle. “Lie all you want.”
“I’m not lying!” Deeba shouted.
“It won’t make any difference,” he said. “We’ll know the truth in…” He peered behind her. “In just a minute.”
Murgatroyd was looking too, his face wrinkled with severe distaste.
“I’d rather not stay around for this,” he said. “I’ll go and wait by the elevator, so I can get straight back as soon as we’ve heard.”
“Very well,” Brokkenbroll said. “I’ll take you back. It’s been very handy, installing that elevator in the lab. Not easy, I know, and very appreciated. Meanwhile, we’ll let things here…get on.” He raised his voice and spoke to the something or someone behind Deeba. “Come along when you’re done and tell us how it went. Good-bye, Miss Resham. I hope for your sake you impart whatever information you have swiftly.”
“You pig,” Deeba spat.
“Lanky dweeb!” shouted Hemi.
“You won’t get away with this,” Deeba said. The Unbrellissimo tipped back his hat and looked quizzical.
“Of course I will,” he said. “Who’s going to stop me? The
Shwazzy herself
couldn’t. So much for the prophecies. If
she
couldn’t, what on earth do you think
you’re
going to do?”
Brokkenbroll reached into Deeba’s bag and pulled out her umbrella. He looked at its unbroken shape with extreme distaste.
“How I do
hate
to see an unbrella in this unfinished state,” he said, and roughly ripped a slit in its canopy.
He dropped it. It didn’t fall flat, but tottered unstably on its handle. It swayed, snapped upright, looked eyelessly around. Brokkenbroll clicked his fingers, and the newborn unbrella leapt to attention.
“Come with me, you,” he said. “Let’s get you treated. But first…”
He gripped Deeba’s shoulders, and spun her and Hemi on their backsides, scraping them on the ground. Now Deeba was pointed at the fire. She could see exactly what was waiting for them.
The flames poured out of a brazier, a big oil drum packed with coal and noxious rubbish, gushing black smoke. Beside it was a pile of trash with a shovel jutting from it.
Standing over the glowing drum, breathing in the stench and filthy fumes with an expression of hunger and delight on his ghastly face, was the thing pretending to be Benjamin Unstible.