The Wilt Alternative (27 page)

Read The Wilt Alternative Online

Authors: Tom Sharpe

Tags: #Fiction:Humour

BOOK: The Wilt Alternative
12.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

And so while Gudrun Schautz cowered in the bathroom and Eva stumbled across the threshold
downstairs he bombarded his captive audience with good tiding. The world was a splendid
place.

Gudrun Schautz disagreed. 'How can you say that when millions are starving?' she demanded.

'The fact that I can say it means that I'm not starving,' said Wilt, applying the logic he had
learnt with Plasterers Two, 'and anyway now that we know they're starving means we can do
something about it. Things would be much worse if we didn't know. We couldn't send them food for
one thing.'

'And who is sending food?' she asked unwisely.

'To the best of my knowledge the wicked Americans,' said Wilt. 'I'm sure the Russians would if
they could grow enough but they don't so they do the next best thing and send them Cubans and
tanks to take their minds off their empty stomachs. In any case, not everyone is starving and
you've only got to look around you to see what fun it is to be alive.'

Gudrun Schautz's view of the bathroom didn't include fun. It looked uncommonly like a prison
cell. But she didn't say so.

'I mean, take me for example,' continued Wilt. 'I have a wonderful wife and four adorable
daughters...'

A snort from the bathroom indicated that there were limits to the Schautz woman's
credulity.

'Well, you may not think so,' said Wilt, 'but I do. And even if I didn't you've got to admit
that the quads love life. They may be a trifle exuberant for some people's taste, but no one can
say they're unhappy.'

'And Mrs Wilt is a wonderful wife?' said Gudrun Schautz with advanced scepticism.

'As a matter of fact I couldn't ask for a better,' said Wilt. 'You may not believe me but
'

'Believe you? I have heard what she calls you and you are always fighting.'

'Fighting?' said Wilt 'Of course we have our little differences of opinion, but that is
essential for a happy marriage. It's what we British call give and take. In Marxist terms I
suppose you'd call it thesis, antithesis and synthesis. And the synthesis in our case is
happiness.'

'Happiness,' snorted Gudrun Schautz. 'What is happiness?'

Wilt considered the question and the various ways he could answer it. On the whole it seemed
wisest to steer clear of the metaphysical and stick to everyday things. 'In my case it happens to
be walking to the Tech on a frosty morning with the sun shining and the ducks waddling and
knowing I don't have any committee meetings and teaching and going home by moonlight to a really
good supper of beef stew and dumplings and then getting into bed with an interesting book.'

'Bourgeois pig. All you think about is your own comfort.'

'It's not all I think about,' said Wilt, 'but you asked for a definition of happiness and that
happens to be mine. If you want me to go on I will.'

Gudrun Schautz didn't but Wilt went on all the same. He spoke of picnics by the river on hot
summer days and finding a book he wanted in a secondhand shop and Eva's delight when the garlic
she had planted actually managed to show signs of growing and his delight at her delight and
decorating the Christmas tree with the quads and waking in the morning with them all over the bed
tearing open presents and dancing round the room with toys they had wanted and would probably
have forgotten about in a week and...Simple family pleasures and surprises which this woman would
never know but which were the bedrock of Wilt's existence. And as he retold them they took on a
new significance for him and soothed present horrors with a balm of decency and Wilt felt himself
to be what he truly was a good man in a quiet and unobtrusive way, married to a good woman in a
noisy and ebullient way. If nobody else saw him like this he didn't care. It was what he was that
mattered and what he was grew out of what he did, and for the life of him Wilt couldn't see that
he had ever done anything wrong. If anything he had done a modicum of good.

That wasn't the way Gudrun Schautz viewed things. Hungry, cold and fearful, she heard Wilt
tell of simple things with a growing sense of unreality. She had lived too long in a world of
bestial actions taken to achieve the ideal society to be able to stand this catechism of domestic
pleasures. And the only answers she could give him were to call him a fascist swine and secretly
she knew she would be wasting her breath. In the end she stayed silent and Wilt was about to take
pity on her and cut short a modified version of the family's holiday in France when the telephone
rang.

'All right, Wilt,' said Flint, 'you can forget the travelogue. This is the crunch. Your missus
is downstairs with the children and if the Schautz doesn't come down right now you're going to be
responsible for a minor massacre.'

'I've heard that one before,' said Wilt. 'And for your information...'

'Oh no, you haven't. This time it's for real. And if you don't bring her down, by God, we
will. Take a look out the window.' Wilt did. Men were climbing into the helicopter in the
field.

'Right,' continued Flint, 'so they'll land on the roof and the first person they'll take out
is you. Dead. The Schautz bitch we want alive. Now move.'

'I can't say I like your priorities,' said Wilt, but the Inspector had rung off. Wilt went
through the kitchen and untied the bathroom door.

'You can come out now,' he said. 'Your friends downstairs seem to be winning. They want you to
join them.'

There was no reply from the bathroom. Wilt tried the door and found it was locked.

'Now listen. You've got to come out. I'm serious. Messrs Baggish and Chinanda are downstairs
with my wife and children and the police are prepared to meet their demands.'

Silence suggested that Gudrun Schautz wasn't. Wilt put his ear to the door and listened.
Perhaps the wretched creature had escaped somehow or, worse still, committed suicide.

'Are you there?' he asked inanely. A faint whimper reassured him.

'Right. Now then, nobody is going to hurt you. There is absolutely no point in staying in
there and...' A chair was jammed under the doorhandle on the other side.

'Shit,' said Wilt, and tried to calm himself. 'Please listen to reason. If you don't come out
and join them all hell is going to be let loose and someone is going to get hurt. You've got to
believe me.'

But Gudrun Schautz had listened to too much unreason already to believe anything. She gibbered
faintly in German.

'Yes, well that's a great help,' said Wilt, suddenly conscious that his alternative had gone
into overkill. He went back to the living-room and called Flint.

'We've got a problem,' he said before the Inspector stopped him.

'You've got problems, Wilt. Don't include us.'

'Yes, well we've all got problems now,' said Wilt. 'She's in the bathroom and she's locked the
door and the way things sound she isn't going to come out.'

'Still your problem,' said Flint. 'You got her in there and you get her out.'

'Now hold on. Can't you persuade those two goons...'

'No,' said Flint and ended the discussion. With a weary sigh Wilt went back to the bathroom
but the sounds inside didn't suggest that Gudrun Schautz was any more amenable to rational
persuasion than before, and after putting his case as forcibly as he could and swearing to God
that there were no Israelis downstairs he was driven back to the telephone.

'All I want to know,' said Flint when he answered, 'is whether she's down with Bonnie and
Clyde or not. I'm not interested in...'

'I'll open the attic door. I'll stand where the buggers can see I'm not armed and they can
come up and get her. Now will you kindly put that suggestion to the sods?'

Flint considered the offer in silence for a moment and said he would call back.

'Thank you,' said Wilt and having pulled the bed away from the door lay on it listening to his
heart beat. It seemed to be making up for lost time.

Two floors below Chinanda and Baggish were edgy too. Eva's arrival, far from quietening the
quads, had aroused their curiosity to new levels of disgusting frankness.

'You've got ever so many wrinkles on your tummy, Mummy,' said Samantha, putting into words
what Baggish had already noticed with revulsion. 'How did you get them?'

'Well, before you were born, dear,' said Eva, who had crossed the Rubicon of modesty by
hobbling naked into the house, 'Mummy's tummy was much bigger. You see, you were inside it.'

The two terrorists shuddered at the thought. It was bad enough being stuck in a kitchen and
hall with those revolting children without being regaled with the physiological intimacies of
their pre-natal existence in this extraordinary woman.

'What were we doing inside you?' asked Penelope

'Growing, dear.'

'What did we eat?'

'You didn't exactly eat.'

'You can't grow unless you eat. You're always telling Josephine she won't grow up big and
strong unless she eats her muesli.'

'Don't like muesli,' said Josephine. 'It's got sultanas in it.'

'I know what we ate,' said Samantha with relish, 'blood.'

In the corner by the cellar stairs Mrs de Frackas, in the throes of a stupendous hangover,
opened a veined eye.

'I shouldn't be at all surprised,' she mumbled. 'Nearest thing to human vampires I've ever
met. Whoever called it babysitting? Some damned fool.'

'But we didn't have teeth,' continued Samantha.

'No, dear, you were tied to Mummy by your umbilical cords. And what Mummy ate went through the
cord.

'Things can't go through cords, mummy,' said Josephine. 'Cords are string.'

'Knives can go through string,' said Samantha.

Eva looked at her appreciatively. 'Yes, dear so they can.'

The discussion was cut short by Baggish. 'Shut up and cover yourself,' he shouted throwing the
Mexican rug from the living-room at Eva.

'I don't see how I can with my hands tied,' Eva began, but the telephone was ringing. Chinanda
answered.

'No more talking. Either...' he said before stopping and listening. Behind him Baggish
clutched his sub-machine gun and kept a wary eye on Eva.

'What are they saying?'

That Gudrun won't come down,' said Chinanda. They want for us to go up.'

'No way. It's a trap. The police are up there. We know that.'

Chinanda took his hand from the phone. 'No one goes up and Gudrun comes down. Five minutes we
give you or...'

'I'll go up,' Eva called out. 'The police aren't up there. My husband is. I'll bring them both
down.'

The terrorists stared at her. 'Your husband?' they asked in unison. The quads joined in. 'You
mean Daddy's in the attic? Oh, Mummy do bring him down. He's going to be ever so cross with Mrs
de Frackas. She drank ever such a lot of Daddy's peepee.'

'You can say that again,' moaned the old lady, but Eva ignored the extraordinary statement.
She was looking fixedly at the terrorists and willing them to let her go up to the flat.

'I promise you I'll...'

'You're lying. You want to go up there to report to the police.'

'I want to go up there to save my children,' said Eva, 'and if you don't believe me tell
Inspector Flint that Henry has got to come down now.'

The terrorists moved away down the kitchen and conferred.

'If we can free Gudrun and get rid of this woman and her filthy children it's good,' said
Baggish. 'We have the man and the old woman.'

Chinanda disagreed. 'We keep the children. That way the woman does nothing wrong.'

He went back to the phone and repeated Eva's message. 'Five minutes we give you only. The man
Wilt comes down...'

'Naked,' said Eva, determined to see that Henry shared her discomfort

'He comes down naked,' Chinanda repeated, 'and with his hands tied...'

'He can't tie his own hands,' said Flint practically.

Gudrun can tie them for him,' answered Chinanda. Those are our conditions.'

He put the phone down and sat looking wearily at Eva. The English were strange people. With
women like this, why had they ever given up their Empire? He was roused from his reverie. Mrs de
Frackas was getting woozily to her feet.

'Sit down,' he shouted at her but the old lady ignored him. She wobbled across to the
sink.

'Why don't I shoot her?' said Baggish. 'That way they'll know we mean what we say.'

Mrs de Frackas squinted at him with bloodshot eyes. 'Young man,' she said, 'with a head like
mine you'd be doing me a favour. Just don't miss.' And to emphasize the point she turned her back
on him and stuck her bun under the cold tap.

Chapter 21

In the Communications Centre there was confusion too. Flint was happily relaying the message
to Wilt and enjoying his protest that it was bad enough risking death by gunshot but he didn't
see why he had to go naked and risk double pneumonia into the bargain and anyway how the hell he
was going to tie his own hands together he hadn't the faintest idea, when he was stopped by the
new head of the Anti-Terrorist Squad.

'Hold everything,' the Superintendent told Flint. 'The Idiot Brigade have just come up with a
psycho-political profile of Wilt and it looks bad.'

'It's going to look a damned sight worse if the bastard doesn't get down out of that flat in
the next three minutes,' said Flint, 'and anyway what the hell is a psycho-political
profile?'

'Never mind that now. Just go into a holding pattern with the terrorists on the ground
floor.'

Leaving Flint feeling like a flight controller trying to deal with two demented pilots on a
collision course, he hurried through to the conference room.

'Right,' he said, 'I've ordered all armed personnel to fall back to lessen the tension. Now do
we allow the swop to go ahead or not?'

Dr Felden was in no doubt 'No,' he said. 'From the data we have accumulated there is no doubt
in my mind that Wilt is a latent psychopath with extremely dangerous homicidal tendencies and to
let him loose...'

'I cannot agree,' said Professor Maerlis. 'The transcripts of the conversations he has been
having with the Schautz woman indicate a degree of ideological commitment to post-Marcusian
anarchism of the highest possible order. I would go further...'

Other books

Fire and Sword by D. Brian Shafer
Friends by Stephen Dixon
La Reina del Sur by Arturo PĂ©rez-Reverte
At Ease with the Dead by Walter Satterthwait
Ash & Flame: Season One by Geiger, Wilson
A Gathering of Crows by Brian Keene
Three-Part Harmony by Angel Payne
A Wave by John Ashbery