Take No Prisoners (22 page)

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Authors: John Grant

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Short Stories (Single Author)

BOOK: Take No Prisoners
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"'Sright." Romford looked gloomier than ever. I wondered how many pints he'd sunk before I'd got to the Heart & Sickle. "So we did the only thing we could do."

"Took him into custody?"

"Yup."

"For further questioning?"

"Yup."

"And he's not talking." This time it wasn't a question.

"Yup. And you know ..." His voice trailed off on a meditative note.

"Yes?"

He rallied. "You know, I think the reason he's not talking is that he hasn't got anything to tell us. Unless he's the best actor in the world – and you never can tell with these stage johnnies, of course – he's every bit as mystified as the rest of us." Romford suddenly grinned, wearily. "Seems a bit ironical, if you get what I mean: the mystifier mystified, the conjurer out-conjured, the prestidigitator presti ... um. Oh, hell, anyway."

"What about Mrs. Thrombosis? MacGregor, I mean."

"The pheromone-packed wife? Tell you, Victor, she's got—"

"Zelda."

"—like bleeding prizewinning marrows, and an—"

"The assistant."

"—on her that'd give even Billy Graham a—"

"Get back to the point, Romford."

He shook his head, as if dazed, but soon his eyes refocused. "Ah, yes, current whereabouts of the suspect's missus. Yes." He wiped his sleeve across his mouth. "Well, we had to let her go, hadn't we? Nothing to keep
her
in for. No way we could book her as an accessory or anything. 'Sides, the way young Mutton was looking at her I reckoned putting her in the cells overnight might mean the end of things between him and his Sabrina."

"Or you and the missus?" I said quietly.

He flushed angrily and snorted. "Never any question of that, my lad," he said emphatically. "I've had me chances, I can tell you, but me and her we're just like lickety-split when it comes to malarking on the side, so it's none of your how's your father 'sfar as I'm concerned."

"Leaving that aside, where is she?" I persisted.

"I imagine she's still at the Old Bull Hotel," he said, clearly glad to change the subject. "That's where the concert party was booked in – her and him and the bloody Irish Finns. Finns ain't what they—"

"You said that."

"Yes, I did. How'd you know? To Sergeant Mutton, in point of fact ..."

The beer was beginning to take its toll. Most of the people who live and work in Cadaver-in-the-Offing flinch if I as much as go near them, but Romford didn't react at all when I put my hand over his and leaned forward to look him close-up in the eyes.

"I'm willing to bet you a month's salary that you won't find her in the Old Bull," I hissed. "You ask me, she's hopped it. Her and The Even Mightier Spongini together, is my guess."

"You think he's alive?"

"I
know
he's alive. Unless he got run over by a car or gored by an escaped bull afterwards, he's as alive as you or me. Probably
more
alive than you, right now."

"But that doesn't make sense! If he'd a been there we'd have found him. I tell you, we searched the whole of St Boniface's Church Hall until there wasn't anything left to search. And no one could have got out of there – we'd got it sealed off tighter'n a nun's—"

"He walked out in full view of your officers," I said.

"
Im
possible! We interviewed every single member of the audience! I even had Sergeant Mutton interview the Missus, just in case there was charges of favoritism afterwards. She didn't like that much, but the ibuprofen's doing wonders."

"You interviewed all the stage staff as well?"

"Course."

"My friend," I said, standing up and preparing to leave, "it's not my job to solve your cases for you. I'm not a
character
, like everyone else in Cadaver-in-the-Offing, so I can't even give you useful leads. All I am is the sweeper-upper – dirty job but somebody's got to do it, you know the drill. But what I
will
do, what I'm
allowed
to do, is offer you a hint that might prove useful to your life in general."

"Wossat?" he slurred. He'd drunk enough beer to be reaching the point of tearfulness.

"I can remind you, my friend," I said, patting the back of his hand, "of the importance of temperance."

~

It was quite late that evening when Romford, all traces of the beer gone from his voice, phoned me. He didn't waste any time in telling me what I already knew.

"Temperance," he said.

"Yes. And a very good thing it is."

"Makes a man think of an old Sixties/Seventies pop group, it does."

"That's what it made me think of, too." I blew on my fingernails.

"They was called the Temperance Seven. But the great gimmick about the name was that there was actually nine of 'em."

"Yes."

"The Family Brød got the nickname 'The Seven Deadly Finns' because someone liked the pun, and they kept it – used it in their advertisements – on the basis it made folk remember them."

I breathed out smugly. "When you were describing their performance to me, I realized that in fact there were only six of them. Three on the bottom row of the pyramid, two on their shoulders, and one more on the top – that makes six, not seven."

"And me a trained observer. I just never noticed it meself. Doubt you would of, either, if you'd been there. It was a hell of an act. Apart from that bit at the beginning, when the curtains opened, I couldn't rightly have told you
how
many of the buggers there were – it was just arms and legs and other bits everywhere. One of those cases where it's easier to see something if you're
not
an eye witness."

I grunted agreement. Whoever said seeing is believing was talking out of his elbow.

"We weren't much interested in those bloody Irish Finns, so Mutton just interviewed 'em in a bunch. 'Seven Deadly Finns,' he was told, so he made sure there was seven of 'em and let 'em go. Never thought anything of it, until I asked him after I left the pub, but, yes, a couple of 'em kept their hands in their pockets the whole time."

"Except that one of them, we now know, was a hand short."

"
Precisement
, as the Frogs say."

"Where did you catch up with Spongini ... Dukes?"

"At the Old Bull Hotel, done his packing and sitting on the suitcase, all neat and ready to do a runner from the country with Zelda tonight, after dark. It was him and her planned the whole thing. She cut off his hand for him while The Mighty Thrombosis was doing all his puffs of smoke and things, then they cauterized his wrist on the backstage stove. They'd already coldbloodedly killed, cooked and eaten the tyrannosaur. She was the one got the hand into the top hat – stupid of me to think that MacGregor would be the one to set up his own props. The idea was to make old Thrombosis look bad in our eyes for just long enough that we'd keep him in the nick until safely after the young lovers had fled the coop. The Finns were in on it as well, of course – Zelda and Dukes ain't the only folks on the circuit who can't stand The Mighty Thrombosis: he's made enemies all over the place."

Romford paused, then: "Here! How did you know we found him?"

"I sneaked an extra look in the hoppers just now."

"Oh, um, yes, well, Dave Knuckle was still in town for
Smack My Butt, Babe
so I took him along with me to help make the arrest. And he, er, got a bit carried away during the interrogation ..."

Ho hum. After all this time, I could read the marks of Knuckle's knuckles like an open book, and this particular book hadn't been in his handwriting. Romford had obviously been very angry indeed: the worst he could have charged Spongini with was conspiring to waste police time, or something – same as Zelda, same as the Family Brød. A man can do what he wants to with his own hand. But I let it pass.

"Dukes must have loved Zelda very much indeed," I said ruefully.

"A lot more than she loved him," Romford said forcefully. "He told us before he ... um, before Knuckle got out of hand, as it were ... told us that she'd been due back at the hotel to pick him up a couple of hours before we got there, and he was beginning to think she wasn't coming for him after all. So we hung about another couple of hours after that, and still no sign of her. Reckon she's scarpered – double-crossed him, got rid of both the men in her life in one swell foop" – hm, still a trace of the day's drinking – "and then scarpered over the hills and far away. I've put an alert out to the ports and airports, but I think we've missed her. And no one's going to issue an extradition order for what she's done – not for this. Bloody women."

We said a few more things on that subject before he finally put the phone down. I noticed he hadn't at any point said thanks to me for sorting his case out for him.

So I didn't feel at all guilty about not telling him the rest of it – not that I would have, anyway.

"Is he convinced?" said Zelda behind me just as I lowered the receiver.

"Yes. Case closed, darling. He's satisfied – is washing his hands of the whole thing." I turned to kiss her.

"Poor Gerry," she said. "Poor, foolish Gerry."

She'd liked Spongini well enough, but he'd been yesterday's news for quite a while now ... ever since I'd met her the last time The Mighty Thrombosis had been doing a gig in Cadaver-in-the-Offing, in fact, during the course of Miss Grimthorpe's
The Kat who Killed the Konjurers
. I was sorry that he'd died, but – hell – he'd be as good as new again in a few days. The plan had been that Romford caught up with him, all right, then took him into custody for a couple of days until he, too, proved to be only a minor player in the game. Meanwhile, of course, Zelda wasn't to flee the country but to come to the one place nobody in Cadaver-in-the-Offing would ever dream of looking.

The cottage of the man they all walk around as if he were a dog turd on the pavement. We could live here together all the rest of our lives, if we wanted to, and no one would ever know. In a few years' time, though, I reckon we'll up sticks and go somewhere else – I mean, my job has its advantages, but I've always dreamt of trying out my chances in the movies ...

So I take Zelda in my arms. We're free at last, and there's a traditional way of celebrating things like this.

Gigglings.

Snoggings.

Strokings.

Kissings.

Gropings.

Fondlings.

Fumblings.

Pretty soon:

Unzippings.

"Oo, Victor," she says. "Oo."

Hands quicker than the eye, that's me.

Sheep

With a heigh and a ho, my friends, let us gather us all here around the fire and sing some songs and tell some tales of the gods in their heavens. Tonight when the clouds flicker the stars shine dimly through, and the ole sole silvery moon is at the full (fool?), so the shamans (shamen?) tell me. And the flames are dancing high in the fire-pit; there's a roast thigh sizzling on the skewer all nicely waiting to crackle and chew in your mouths; and all of us have good skins to wrap our shoulders up against the teeth of the wind. With a heigh and a ho, let us thank all the gods for making life good.

No, no: I will not have your tears, Sanya; I will not have you wetting the furry mat of my chest with your sobbing. Tears are insults to the gods; temptations that may bring them back to us again, to walk among us and spit with the fire that they used to breathe. Laugh, child, laugh! Show all the wide heavens that you are in love with life, that everything is good, good,
good
! Tell the gods to ... stay ... where ... they ... are, up in the billowy, bollocky sky beyond the clouds: tell them that we of the wastes down here have no need of them. There, that's better, child: just a little smile and all of your faces become beautiful.

Listen while I tell you my tale.

You remember the great column of ash that Qinmeartha walked around with his lady LoChi? Yes, that's right, after the sky-dragon had been sore wounded, and had roared away, far away, into the dun west. (These, I should add, are the tales my father told to me, and his father before him.) Then we shall join Qinmeartha and LoChi, stumbling and slumming along in the Plain of Skulls, the great ashy tower a clenched fist in the sky behind them; clanking and clunking along they are, he with his sword of time-burnished aluminum and his buckler of black rubber, she with her pots and her pans, scavenged from the ruins over the years and treasured to her heart like fresh meat. Here they are, walking slowly: if you look closely into the flames you can just see them ...

As night began swiftly to fall (
clong!
– down with a crash!) the Lord Qinmeartha turned in the angry dust and spat backwards, from where they had come, at the specter of the tower of ashes, still not out of sight despite all their day's walking. "We must stay here for the night, my lady," he said to LoChi, bowing down low like a gentleman ... in the way that gentlemen used to do in those days.

She shivered, for the passing of the column had been a time of unheard screams for her: she would have wished they could press on, until they had left even the Plain of Skulls far and almost forgotten behind them. But it was nearly dark, and there was a squalid little ugly stream, its waters slow-moving and scummy, close at hand. She said nothing, but stopped where she stood and began to unhook all the long strings of pans and other utensils swaddling her (obligatorily) fair body. Qinmeartha, for his part (oh, they say he was a fine-looking broth of a man: big and brawny, flesh and muscles a-rippling-o) – he stuck his sword firmly into the ground, its knotted handle all upthrusting to the roiling clouds (you never could see the cold stars through them in this long ago), virile and cornily defiant. Was he the last of all the defiant men?

And in moments she had the fire glittering and winking between her palms, brown water from the stream bubbling hotly in one of her oh so precious pots, while he out of habit scanned the glum horizon for wolves (there were none: even today the wolves shun the Plain of Skulls) and flexed his biceps at the icy steel of the omnipresent clouds which the moon in all its artlessness was trying to blow away. Oh, he was a vain man, was Qinmeartha: he wanted to fight all the world and make it reborn in his own image. And every night he knelt down and he prayed to the gods, commanding them to come back down to the Earth to join hands with him and help him conquer all that he had seen, to trample the beggary scarecrow people just as he had trampled his beggary scarecrow wife. "I am Qinmeartha!" he shouted every night up at the deaf clouds. "I am your master, you are my servants! Come to me as I command!"

But all the nights the heavens stayed tranquil, and the gods heard him not. But LoChi, the fair lady, yes, she smiled into the glowing flames as the tough grain stewed away – laughed in her silent wise at the clinging folly of her tormentor.

He saw the smile scamper across her scarred cheeks, and kicked her in the head.

Ah, child, it was a painful blow that threw her raggedy body onto the fire, which greedily reached out its corroding arms to embrace her. She flailed her limbs and screamed like a spitted rat, but he ignored her cries and walked away to commune with the gods in relative peace.

(Yes, I know it seems strange that he should hurt her. But these were the old days, not long after the flames had cleansed the world. Some of the godlike still lived in those times, before our grandfathers and grandmothers took pity on them and sent them all to Heaven. Qinmeartha was one of the last of them – maybe
the
last.)

With a heigh and a ho (and I've said that before), but the fair lady LoChi pulled herself stickily from the clutching fire, and she threw herself into the oily waters of the stream, so that they could soothe her pain. And, unknown to Qinmeartha, as her hurt began to wane she let her glinty eyes flicker over the mat blade of his sword as she cursed him with all of the words that she knew. And she cursed him even the more when he strutted back into the flamelight and squatted his haunches down to the dust to feed on the stew that she had cooked him.

He foresaw nothing, you know.

She pulled herself dripping up from the waters and moved slow and painful like a beast dragged from the sea to his side, and she hid the dark hatred in her heart, and knelt down beside him, nestling his shoulder with the stump of her breast. Ay, and she smiled paper smiles at him (rippling flames chased dark shadows in play through the lines of her face), and she was gentle and loving like you are, child ... you are.

"Oh, my Lord Qinme," she whispered,

"so strong and so fine and so brave.

Protect me; don't leave me."

But deep in her entrails

she danced on the mound of his grave.

"Be silent!" he shouted. "Yes, woman, be silent!

I'll cut you to ribbons, I say.

Let me eat up these faeces you've boiled up as stew,

and then to the gods I must pray."

And so the fair lady LoChi fell silent, all but the pound of her heart pulsing with rage. She watched as he slurped like an animal, tongue digging deep down into the pot, finishing every last scrap of the food, leaving her nothing. (Yea, he was a wise one and a cool one, was Qinmeartha: one of the long-gone godlike ones.) And he flung the pot from him into the world's darkness, stood up and farted, and pushed her aside.

Ears pricked high she listened to his shuffling in the night. Off in the distance that shuffling stopped, and she heard the hollow drone of his proud voice as he extolled himself to the heavens on high. And with a quivering hand she reached out for the sword where it reared in the ground. Panting with fear (for it was Qinmeartha's sweet loved one, that sword) she gripped it and drew it out from its friable scabbard – and lo! the gods did not strike her. (His voice, she could hear, was bubbling on, like the roar of a storm or the cries of a child.) So she whipped – once, twice – through the air with the blade; and still the godly clouds smiled down like milk in that night. (And Qinmeartha was praying, still praying, she heard.)

With the sword in her hand,

she moved like fine sand,

to the hillock where Qinme was stood.

With the speed of desire

or the flickering fire

she struck and she knew it was good.

He screamed and he fell:

his last moments in Hell

he spent writhing where once he had prayed;

and through thundering tears

her voice filled his ears

as she cursed all the gods he'd obeyed ...

Cursed them all

(Rumi and Sadi and Gorgi, all three)

(fuckem and fuckem and fuckem, all three)

in the heat of her rage and her hate;

cursed the sheep that had worshipped

the sheep that had died

and the sheep that the gods killed and ate.

And the flames from the night

that turned ebony white

in the time when the Earth died in fire;

and the clouds that still fly

in the poisonous sky

and the rags and the hunger

the plague and the pain

the cries of the children

the crippling rain

but mostly

yes

mostly

the fire ...

And when the clouds brightened again, and the new day began, LoChi still held the sword on high, and still with a dry and brackish voice she cursed; and she kicked the bloodied body of Qinmeartha, pricked it yet again with the blade one more time before the words stopped flowing from her cracked lips. Then she broke the sword over her knee and threw the pieces to the four points of the compass.

Back to the blackness of the dead camp-fire she went, the world pulsing and trembling all around her. She washed the dirtied pan in the even dirtier stream, and put it back on the cord with the others, and wound the cord once and then twice and then three times around the bones of her body; cupped her hands and then drank from the acrid warm waters; spat; looked for the last time at this desolate place.

Then she turned and on painful legs hobbled away, in the dust and the useless tears ...

With a heigh and a ho, my child and my friends, I hear in the faraway the sounds that the wind is up and bringing the dust from the Plain of Skulls, where Qinmeartha saw his last. It is time that we went into our hides (yes, child, you can share mine tonight: together we shall keep the cold from our bodies) and protected ourselves from the snarling dust that nips the soul. (No, my child, my little one: you shall have no nightmares. I, myself, I shall stay awake and hold you close all the sad night long, and fight away the monsters.)

And smile, all of you! Smile!

There are a million million spirits up in Heaven queuing to be born again here in Hell, all mixed up and churning like maggots in a sore. Qinmeartha and the other godlike ones are only a few among many: their turn should fail to come in our times, however hard they push and shove in the queue. So let your laughter rip through the howls of the dust tonight (and yours too, my child) to tell the gods and the godlike ones that we need them not, tell them that

all's well

in Hell.

And if the laughter hurts a little as it comes to your lips, if the smiles scuttle away into all the darkest parts of your minds and refuse to be drawn out, like the stars flirting among the clouds – then remember the great joke, the cosmic joke, the joke that the gods told our fathers' fathers' fathers in the final moments before the Night of Flames came and the world was made clean:

"We all thought we were only joking."

With a heigh and a ho, my friends.

My child.

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