There was a silence, marinated in scorn and spiced with amusement. Garcia Menendez y Compania suppressed a giggle by biting a mouthful of ectoplasm.
âDear colleague,' said Deustches Federriegel, not unkindly, âhuman beings aren't meant to do
anything.
They just are. They have a function to fulfil, of course, in the working of the Great Mechanism. What that function is depends on the point their civilisation has reached, of course. In the early days, their purpose is to invent the machines. Later on, they're only there so that computers have someone to talk to. But humans aren't
for
anything. Certainly not,' it added, with a muted splutter, âthe pursuit of happiness.'
âOh,' said KIC. âI see.'
Chicopee Falls Machine Tool shrugged. âI bet you don't even know what happiness is,' it said. âDon't worry about it; the humans don't, either. Quite probably there's no such thing, even though there's a word for it. After all, they've got a word for unicorns, but it doesn't actually follow that unicorns exist. No, humans and companies - gods and animals and angels and devils too, for that matter - they're all just incidentals. By-products, or pieces of plant and equipment, or even just the pile of swarf and shavings on the workshop floor.'
âI see,' KIC said. âOr rather I don't see in the least, because that suggests that there is a purpose, even if we're not it. But . . .'
âYou're missing the point,' said Deutsches Federriegel irritably. âThere is no end product. Who needs an end product, so long as there's production? You're a company, for pity's sake, I shouldn't need to have to explain really basic things like this. Production is all. What do humans and animals do? They live in order to reproduce so that their offspring can have offspring who have offspring. Companies make and sell in order to pay their staff and buy materials so that they can make and sell, and if they have money left over they use it to expand, so that they can make and sell more in order to make and sell more. Production is a way of touching infinity; so long as production continues, there is no diminution and no ending. The process carries on. The process only needs us in the same way that God needs the things He created; because, if there were no people and animals and planets and stars, who would there be to know that God exists? Think about it: God's just shorthand for the process.'
âIn the beginning was the conveyor belt,' Garcia Menendez agreed. âFancy you not knowing that. You'll be asking us to explain VAT to you next.'
But KIC shook its head. âI don't like that,' it said. âI think that sucks, if you'll pardon me for saying so. In fact, if you'll excuse me, I think I'd like to go home now.'
âYou have this amusingly naive idea that you can go home,' replied Chicopee Falls Machine Tool unpleasantly. âI expect you believe in Father Christmas and the Tooth Fairy, too. Sorry, but no way. Now hold still while we measure you for a body. You look like a size 8 to me. Garcia, the tape measure.'
The phantoms took a step forward; but Kawaguchiya Integrated Circuits had decided not to hold still after all. It duckedâ
âOh look, he's trying to run away,' observed Chicopee Falls Machine Tool. âHow endearingly futile. Quick, get the main gates closed while Garcia raises the drawbridge.'
âJust a minute, I thought it was
Garcia's
turn to do the gates and me doing the drawbridge.'
âNo, you're wrong there, it's Chico's turn to do the drawbridge and my turn to do the searchlights.'
âNo it isn't.'
âYes it is.'
âNo it isn't.'
âYes it is.'
âWill
somebody
for fuck's sake close the gates and raise the drawbridge?'
âAnd do the searchlight.'
âAnd, as you have so validly pointed out, do the sodding searchlight. Quickly.
Now!
'
A three-quarters-of-a-million-candlepower finger of light prodded into the darkness, illuminating nothing. There was a moment of perfect silence.
âBlighter's escaped.'
âCan't have. There
is
no escape from the ultimate audit.'
âActually, I beg to differ with you on that one, 'cos he has.'
âBugger.' In the darkness, something ethereal and transcendent sniffed loudly. âOh well, never mind, can't be helped. Here, either of you two chaps got a mobile on you? I think now would be a very opportune time to phone my stockbroker.'
Â
Having been a flat thing of paint and canvas for approximately twice as long as America has been a nation, Maria was still finding her feet as a human being. It would be rash, she knew, to form snap judgements about things that long-term human beings had spent their whole lives dealing with, but which she was now encountering for the first time. In consequence, she was making a conscious effort to form logical, considered opinions rather than allowing herself to be guided by first impressions.
Even so, there was no way she was ever going to like the inside of police stations. For one thing, they were full of policemen, and you didn't have to be Descartes or Mr Spock to work out that this put them in the same category as sinking ships, burning houses or nailed-down coffins; the sort of place you don't really want to be, not even for a free radio alarm clock and the chance to enter our grand prize draw.
And even if you removed all the scuffers, she mused as she walked out into the fresh air and pitch darkness, that still left a whole load of criminals, loonies, lawyers and similar second-degree nastinesses, not to mention the foul interior décor and the all-permeating smell of decomposing upholstery and men's socks. As far as she was concerned, she could tick off copshops on her list of experiences to be tried once, and move on to someplace more congenial, such as a charnel-house or a dentist's waiting room. Mercifully, she hadn't had to spend all that long inside the dismal place; she'd been sitting in her cell trying to decide where to start digging her escape tunnel and doing mental arithmetic to compute roughly how long it would take her (something in the region of a hundred years had been her best estimate), when suddenly the door had opened and a very weary-looking sergeant had told her she was free to go. Apparently it had been raining lawyers out at the front desk; scores of them in expensive suits and hand-stitched shoes. They'd pointed out to the sergeant that if he let Maria out, they'd all leave immediately. This, the sergeant felt, was a small price to pay for a million-per-cent improvement in his working conditions (he'd been prepared to go as high as his left arm or his first-born son), and so here she was, free as a bird.
She walked slowly up the Charing Cross Road, savouring the really rather pleasant sensation of not being in a police station and turning over in her mind the various things she intended to say to Kawaguchiya Integrated Circuits just as soon as she could find somewhere to recharge the batteries of her laptop. At the first dustbin she passed, she stopped to dispose of the half-transparent paper bag that contained the last of the cream slices (the desk sergeant had insisted she took it away with her, and then made her sign about a tree and a half's worth of forms before she was allowed to have it back), as she did so taking a mental vow never again to throw patisserie at the cops while wearing impractically high heels. That small ritual duly performed, she charted a course back to the KIC building, speculating as to the kind of reception she was likely to get there. There was a better-than-average chance that there would be reference made to the empty chair behind her desk, the overflowing in-tray, the things left undone which ought to have been done. It was going to be interesting to see how they'd react when she explained that her absence was the result of putting into effect the company's new cakes-and-flatfeet initiative.
âOh it's
you
,' said Mr Philips, the assistant junior deputy something-or-other, in a tone of voice that suggested he'd either encountered the risen Christ or found a tuning fork in his cornflakes. âWell, well, well. Fancy that.' He paused in mid-flow, treated her to a long stare, and sniffed. âYou look like you've been sleeping under the railway arches,' he said.
âI resent that,' Maria replied. âIf a girl can't spend a night in prison without people making hurtful remarks about her appearance, it's a pretty poor show. Was there anything specific, or are you just destruct-testing your sense of humour?'
âWhy,' asked Mr Philips coldly, âwere you in prison?'
Maria shrugged. âOh, assaulting the police, resisting arrest, that sort of thing. Any coffee going? I'm parched.'
Mr Philips' eyebrows rose like startled lifts. âI see,' he said. âWell, at the risk of sounding a bit old fashioned, I'm not sure that's really the sort of behaviour . . .'
He hesitated, recognising the onset of that same not-such-a-good-idea-after-all feeling that fish sometimes get when the free lunch turns out to have a hook in it. Maria was smiling at him.
âGosh,' she said. âI knew one of these days you were going to stand up and be counted. Good for you.'
âI'm sorry?'
âI've always had this feeling that sooner or later you'd turn round and say, I don't care if it
is
official company policy, I'm not going to do it and that's that. I'm impressed.'
âOfficial company...'
âDidn't you know?' Maria looked surprised, like a mermaid caught shoplifting. âOh. If you don't believe me, put your head round the door of the legal department and ask them. They should know; they had the job of getting me out of clink half the night.'
âOh,' said Mr Philips. âOfficial company policy. Assaulting the police.'
Maria patted his hand reassuringly. âIt's not as bad as it sounds. All you have to do is throw doughnuts at them.'
âThrow
doughnuts
â'
She nodded. âAnd all the resisting arrest bit means is that you run away when they chase you, and they don't look where they're going and trip over things. It's just as well you met me, isn't it?' she added. âWouldn't have looked good if you were the only person of junior executive grade and upwards who didn't realise . . .'
By the time she reached her office, she was beginning to regret that remark; because it was rapidly becoming apparent that she (and presumably Mr Philips, who was known to be the last person ever to hear anything) was the only person of any grade whatsoever who hadn't actually realised the company was suddenly dying. And the first she knew of it was when two men in overalls came in and took away her desk.
âWe'll be back for the picture in a minute,' one of them said over his shoulder. âRight then, to me, mind the bleedin' door . . .'
The picture . . .
Time, Maria realised, to act quickly and decisively. She therefore spent the next four minutes standing on first one foot and then the other trying to puzzle out what to do. It was only the thump of boots in the corridor that snapped her out of it.
They're coming back. They're coming for the picture. They're coming for
me
.
Within all of us, the hypothesis runs, no matter how droopy and wet we may appear, there is in fact a coiled spring of instinctive action just waiting for the moment when it can find release. Some of us, indeed, make full use of this latent facility, to the extent that we stop acting like people and become hard to tell apart from hyperactive cuckoo clocks. Others never even suspect, which makes the explosion all the more astonishing when it actually happens.
At the very moment when the door handle began to turn, Maria vaulted over her desk, grabbed the picture in both hands, lifted it (they may be taking the furniture but they haven't disconnected the alarm systems; drat), located the window and jumped.
Furthermore, the hypothesis states, it's worth bearing in mind that seven times out of ten the things we do under the influence of the uncoiling spring of instinct are in fact incredibly stupid. Such as, for example, jumping through a fifteenth-storey window. The hypothesis doesn't make any allowance for whether the jumper is or is not holding a fourteenth-century painting at the time; presumably because that was more or less the time when the research funding ran out and the researchers had to pack it in and go find themselves proper jobs.
Ah, said Maria to herself, as the world was suddenly filled with an awful lot of fast-moving Down. Not so clever, after all.
In fact, she was wrong. Instinct would probably have explained it to her, if only she'd had the wit to ask. You're going to be all right, Instinct would have told her, because immediately before you're due to hit the ground and go
splat!
a squadron of winged demons will snatch you out of the air and carry you off bodily to the Fourth Circle of Hell. If only you'd asked, it would add, I could have set your mind at rest.
CHAPTER ELEVEN