Chris nodded. âYou told me all about that,' he said.
âWhich brings us back to the question,' Jill went on, with a sigh. âWho's this
she
they're so dead keen to find?'
âI've been thinking about that,' he said. âSatNav - the, um, entity inside my SatNav; she's a she.'
Jill frowned. âSo am I,' she said. âActually, so are a lot of people.'
âYes, but maybe she's involved in all this.' Chris hesitated; but surely it couldn't do any harm now, not after SatNav had tried to kill him - âThere was one thing I didn't tell you, about the other demon. The one yesterday.'
Her eyes gleamed. âI thought so,' she said. âWell?'
So he told her; how, just before it left the car, the demon had reached past him and turned SatNav on with its claw. âAnd that's all,' he concluded lamely. âI didn't tell you at first because I didn't think it was importantâ'
âFibber.'
âAll right.' Chris held up a hand in front of his face. âYou're right. I was afraid that if I told you, your people would take her away and break her open or something. I didn't want anything to happen to her.' He raised both hands and spread his fingers: surrender. âYou know why, don't you?'
Compassion; compassion in victory, which isn't quite the same thing. âLike I said,' Jill replied, âyou aren't the first, I don't suppose you'll be the last, and I'm not going to pass judgement. And you've told me now, which is the main thing. And yes,' she added, âI do think it's significant. Not absolutely sure why, but I have a feeling about it. Like, it may just answer the really big question that's been bugging both of us: why you?'
Chris tried to think, but - âAll right, then. Why me?'
âSimply because the thing happened to be banged up in your SatNav,' she said. âIf that's what they're after. It's just a hypothesis at this stage,' she added quickly. âBarely that, even. Still, half a hypothesis is marginally better than a complete and utter clue deficiency. All right,' she said, âI think that's everything for now.' She glanced at her watch. âLunchtime,' she said. âI reckon the least the government can do is buy you a pint and a sandwich after screwing up your Saturday. Or would you rather get on home?'
Be back by one, Karen had said. Well, no chance of that now. What a pity. âOn expenses?' he queried.
âYour taxes at work,' Jill replied. âTell you what: a pint, a sandwich
and
a packet of crisps. We can always make up the budget deficiency by firing a few clerical officers. And,' she added, âI promise not to say a word about demons or malevolent SatNav entities or geometaphysical rifts. Deal?'
Â
Jill kept her promise. Instead, they talked about old friends from school, all of whose lives turned out to be either vastly better or immeasurably worse than his own. That left Chris fifty per cent depressed and fifty per cent obnoxiously smug, and two pints at lunchtime added a haze of gentle anaesthesia. She paid for his taxi home.
The bathroom, he remembered; he was supposed to start stripping off the old wallpaper. The cheerful part of him thought
why not
, and the miserable part thought
might as well
, so he went into the kitchen to assemble the necessary arsenal. There on the table was the pantacopt-tapemeasure. Bloody stupid thing to leave lying about, he told himself sternly; what if Karen had found it and started playing with it? She could've turned herself into salami before she'd realised there was something wrong. He took it into the bedroom and hid it under the bed, out of harm's way.
How to strip off wallpaper. First, you get it wet with the stuff from the bottle. This makes it soggy, and then you scrape at it with the scraper. Chris had never been any good at it, but it hadn't mattered when he was young, because one of grandad's friends from the factory came round and did it by magic in ten minutes flat. He'd taken the trouble to learn the magic words, but he couldn't make them work. Hence the bottle of stuff, and the scraper.
Half an hour of picking and worrying away at it, and he'd cleared a space the size of a wine-bottle label. He wasn't sure when Karen'd be back, but he was conscious of the need to get a move on. He dabbed on more of the stuff and scraped harder, with the result that he snapped the scraper blade, cut his thumb, jumped back in alarm and knocked over the stuff bottle, spilling the remaining contents into the sink.
At least it hadn't gone all over the carpet tiles. Still, it was a pretty close approximation to a disaster, and for a while Chris stood there feeling sad, unable to think of anything he could do about it. Then a thought struck him.
It was sheer desperation; but - well, the
Book
had said they cut
anything
. He retrieved the tapemeasure, ran out nine inches of blade and (bending it slightly so it lay flush against the wall) stroked the half-soggy wallpaper with it.
Instant success: it came away like shaving foam under a new razor blade. He tried it again. His next sweep cleaned off three square feet, leaving the plastered wall smooth and unmarked. At this rate - his inner accountant was totalling up the brownie points, and the result was staggering. If only he could contrive to get the whole job finished by the time she got back - not implausible, at the rate the tapemeasure was going - not only would he be forgiven for not being home in time to go socialising, but there'd be enough change left over to pay for at least one, maybe two further mistakes. Right, he thought.
The blade made a gentle hissing noise as it snowploughed through the paper, and the lack of stuff from the bottle didn't seem to make any difference at all; magic, he assumed. How nice it must be, he thought, ever so slightly resentfully, to be able to do proper magic, like this, all the time: magic to wash up and hoover, dust, scour ovens, wash cars. How useful; how convenient. Instead, all he got was demons and geometaphysical rifts, action-adventure stuff which scared him rigid and interfered with his chances of making his monthly target. Even the stuff he sold to the shops - well, it wasn't action-adventure, but a lot of it was just toys, junk, no practical application in the real world. Now, if only JWW Retail could come up with a line of genuinely useful consumer and household itemsâ
There was, Chris noticed, something written on the wall, under the archaeological strata of wallpaper layers. He could make out the top halves of a row of letters, big block capitals in blue chalk. Mildly intrigued, he scraped down a little further until he could read them:
Â
DANGER
Â
He frowned. Gas main? Electricity cable? Nice of whoever it was to mention it, but a little more information would have been helpful. He scraped a little further.
Â
YOU ARE IN TERRIBLE DANGER
Â
All right, he thought, but please be more specific;
do not drill here
, or something like that. Also, terrible danger? As in bringing the whole wall down, or frying himself to a crisp? He scraped down, and got:
Â
TRUST NO ONE
Â
He stood back and scratched his head. A practical-joking painter and decorator with a flair for melodrama. âYou included,' he said aloud; then, with a shrug, scraped a bit more.
Â
EXCEPT ME, OBVIOUSLY
Â
Um, he thought. Well; a practical-joking painter and decorator with a flair for melodrama and delusions of humour might have guessed what a normal person's reaction might be. He was getting close to the bottom of the wall now, and had to stoop to scrape the next patch:
Â
THE DEMONS ARE HUNTING YOU. THEY WILL
Â
Oh shit, Chris thought.
Let's see, he said to himself. We've been here, what, four years; we redid the bathroom when we moved in, but we were in a hurry, so we just papered over what was already there; and there's three, no, four layers; so that's our layer and three more. Which means this lot's been here a long time, and there isn't any way of writing
through
waterproof vinyl wallpaper. In which case, this message can't be for me, can it? Well?
He read it again:
Â
THE DEMONS ARE HUNTING YOU. THEY WILL
Â
They will what? He got on his hands and knees and scraped right down to the skirting board:
Â
CONTINUED ON NEXT WALL
Â
Fine. He went into the kitchen and fetched the folding steps, and started scraping at the top of the right-hand wall.
Â
HUNT YOU DOWN UNTIL THEY FIND YOU. THEY HAVE ALREADY
Â
He slipped on the top rung of the steps, dropped the tapemeasure and grabbed at the wall with his left hand to steady himself. Then he looked down and saw, with a resigned wretched feeling, that the tapemeasure had sliced the doors off the bathroom cabinet. Marvellous, he thought. If I wasn't in terrible danger before, I am now.
Â
TRIED ONCE. NEXT TIME I WILL NOT BE THERE TO SAVE YOU. THE ONE WHO IS TO COME MUST BE PROTECTED AT ALL COSTS. ONLY YOU CAN
Â
Oh for crying out loud, the telephone. Chris hopped off the ladder, carefully laid the tapemeasure on the floor, and scampered through into the hall.
âThere's been a development.' Jill's voice, sounding rattled. âIt's really weird, I can'tâ'
Not
now
, he thought. âLook, Jill, could I call you back? Only I'm sort of up to my eyes right at this very moment.'
âIt's back.'
All right, then. âWhat's back?'
âThe entity,' she said. âIt's back inside your SatNav. We went to do a low-level demiurge scan on the casing, and it's definitely in there.'
âOh,' he said. âThat's good, isn't it?'
âSort of.' Definite hesitation in her voice. âOnly, the thing is, it's sort of barricaded itself in, and we can't open it up. God only knows how it's doing it, some kind of really powerful Gatekeeper or Portcullis charm, the energy drain must be off the scale, but it's managing it somehow.'
He thought for a bit, then said, âHardly surprising, though, is it? I mean, she must know that if you can crack the casing open, you're going to do nasty things to her, for escaping. Not,' he added quickly, âthat I've got any sympathy, I'm just saying. It's basic survival instinct, surely.'
âI suppose,' Jill replied. âIt's still crazy, though. For one thing, if it managed to get loose why in heaven's name would it want to come back? It's like an escaped convict breaking back into prison. Doesn't make sense.'
She had a point, as always. âEven so,' he said. âShe's back under lock and key, so all's well that ends well.'
âIt's not as simple as that. In the first place, how did it get out? Second, how did it get back in again and why? Third, how's it managing to keep us out, and how come a fairly low-grade entity like that's generating that kind of power?'
That jogged Chris's memory. âTalking of which,' he said, âI meant to ask you. What
is
she, exactly? I mean, you just keep saying
the entity
. Is she a demon, or what?'
Jill sounded shocked. âOh no, nothing like that. Something pretty innocuous; well, relatively. They can all be bloody dangerous if you aren't careful. No, it's just a plain ordinary dryad, no big deal, or so you'd have thought.'
âFine. What the hell's a dryad?'
âOh, right. It's a nature spirit or genius loci, almost exclusively associated with forests. They live in trees and protect them from enemies. Basically, just an elf.'
âElf?'
âYes.'
For a moment, the word made no sense. âLike, Santa's little helpers, that sort of thing?'
âNo,' Jill snapped impatiently. âTell you what, look it up. There's a very helpful guide to species recognition and characteristics on our website, doubleyoudoubleyoudoubleyou dot delendisunt, all one word, dot gov dot uk forward slash entities. All you need to know in one handy easy-to-access reference. All right?'
âJust a tick, this pencil's not very - what was that word, delenâ?'
She spelt it out for him. âGot that? Fine. Look, sorry but I've got to dash. Just thought you'd like to know. One less thing to worry about - well, for you, anyhow.'
An elf, Chris thought as he put the phone down, she's an elf.
He tried to picture an elf in his mind, but the image that presented itself didn't seem quite right, and he had a feeling he was probably getting âelf ' muddled up with âsmurf '. Anyway, it didn't matter. If she was safely back in her casing, it was, as Jill had said, one less thing to stress out about.
Talking of whichâ
Back into the bathroom, grab the tapemeasure, up the ladder, scrape, andâ
Â
YOU'RE BACK, THEN. GOOD OF YOU TO SPARE THE TIME
Â
He sighed. âI'm sorry,' he said aloud. âNow, you'd got as far as “only you canâ”'
Â
ONLY YOU CAN BRING THE ONE THAT IS TO COME ACROSS THE INTERFACE
Â
His arm was starting to get ever so tired. âIs that right?' he said. âWhat interface?'
Scrape, scrape, scrape; andâ
Â
WHO WERE YOU TALKING TO, ANYHOW?
Â
Chris scowled, âJust an old school friend, if it's any of your business. Lookâ'
The tapemeasure slipped out of his hand and slid down the wall, taking a great swathe of paper with it. Nice trick, he couldn't help but concede.
Â
YOU MUST SET FREE THE ONE WHO IS CURSED, RESCUE THE ONE THAT IS TO COME FROM THOSE THAT ARE HIDDEN AND END THE WAR AMONG THE CHILDREN OF THE DARK. IF YOU FAIL, YOU WILL DIE AND THE HUMAN RACE WI