âOn the high seas, me old mate,' the King replied. âOn your way to seek fame, fortune, and the sheila with the big -'
âPlease be more specific.'
The King smiled; that is to say, the corners of his jaws lifted, and his bright, small blue eyes sparkled even more than usual. âWe're on a ship,' he said.
âI had in fact come to that conclusion already. What bloody ship, and why?'
The King chuckled. âBecause,' he replied, âyou'd get pretty flamin' wet trying to cross the old surf without one. Eh?'
Asaf sighed. It wasn't, he said to himself, fair; not on him, and not on everybody else. Why should the rest of the world be deprived of their ration of idiots just so that he could have an embarrassing profusion?
âWhere,' he asked, âare we going?'
âPommieland,' the King said. âThe old country. Gee, you'll love it there, mate. It's really beaut, trust me.'
âEngland?'
âThat's the ticket.'
Asaf frowned. âBut that's crazy.'
âThat's where she lives, chum. The jam tart with the . . .'
âFine.' Asaf drew in a deep breath and counted up to ten. âAnd this ship . . .'
âHitched a lift with an old cobber of mine, actually,' said the King. âA really bonzer old bastard, do anything for you. Knows these seas like the back of his hand.'
Something horrible seemed to slide down the back of Asaf 's neck, only on the inside. âPlease,' he said, raising a hand feebly, âreassure me. Tell me we haven't hitched a lift with Sinbad the Sailor.'
âYou know Simbo?'
âHeard of him,' Asaf muttered. âBut -'
âSimbo and me,' the King went on, âwe go way back. Me and old Simbo . . .'
Asaf lay back on the deck and covered his face with the edge of a redundant sail. âI think I'd like to go to sleep now,' he said. âAnd if I don't wake up, never mind.'
âBut -'
âLook!' Asaf sat bolt upright, and stabbed the King in the left pectoral with his forefinger. The scales, he noticed in passing, were harder than his fingernail. âThis time last week,' he said, âI was content. Not happy, but content. I had a sleazy little hovel with a hole in the roof, my own poxy little business that wasn't going anywhere, fish three times a day, some grubby old clothes, several people I hadn't borrowed money off yet. I was content. And then you turn up, with your bloody three wishes -'
âSteady on, mate . . .'
âI will not steady on!' Asaf shouted. âTake me home again, now. And that's a wish.'
The King sighed, filling the hold with damp green steam. âI know what it is,' he said, âyou're hungry. A bit of good honest tucker inside you and you'll be as right as -'
âNOW!'
âSorry.'
âWhat?'
âNo can do,' replied the King awkwardly. âIt's a bit late for all that now, mate. You should have thought about it before you came.'
âWhat the hell do you mean?' Asaf growled. âYou got me here, you get me out. And while we're on the subject, what the fuck was all that stuff with that damn bottle?'
âHow about,' said the King - he was disappearing, fading into the pale sunlight that streaked down into the hold through an unfastened hatch - âa nice egg and tomato sarny? Or I can do you pilchards.'
âBut . . .'
The King had gone, leaving behind him a few airborne sparkles and a memory of the word âsarny'. Overhead, the unsecured hatch slammed shut, and Asaf heard the sound of bolts shooting home. He sat for a moment, speechless with rage and confusion. Then he shrugged, folded the corner of sail into a pillow and lay down.
âI hate pilchards!' he shouted, and closed his eyes.
Â
And here's the latest
, warbled the television,
on the nuclear tests story. And we're taking you live to our man on Pineapple Atoll. Danny, can you hear me?
Philly Nine grinned, propped his feet on the footstool and used the handset to turn up the volume.
Loud and clear, Bob
, chirruped the reporter, who had replaced the studio set on the screen. Behind him there was a view of blue skies and coconut palms.
And the latest seems to be that we now have confirmation of the existence of the giant ants. The giant ants have, in fact, been sighted. By me. I saw them.
The reporter seized up and stood, gazing into the camera lens. After a gentle prompt from the studio, he continued.
So far
, he said,
we've sighted sixteen of the giant ants. They're big, like twenty feet tall at the shoulder, and they're making a real mess of the landscape, I can tell you. Also, attempts to deal with them by way of aerial dusting with ant powder and dive-bomb attacks with kettles of boiling water have proved basicaily futile. A spokesman for the World Wildlife Fund who chained himself to the leg of one ant in protest against these culling attempts has been eaten, but otherwise there are no reports of casualties.
It was the studio's turn to say something, but nothing was said. The reporter, by now smiling disconcertingly, continued.
More importantly, the diplomatic exchanges over how these ants came to mutate so drastically is really beginning to hot up. I think all the superpowers are now in agreement that the mutation was caused by clandestine nuclear weapons tests, although I should add that there haven't been any seismic readings to confirm this theory. Where everyone seems to disagree is over who actually did the test. In fact, everybody is accusing everybody else, and the situation really is beginning to get a bit fraught. In fact, we could be looking at the end of the multilateral disarmament initiative here, so for anybody out there with a redundant coal-cellar, the message is, start taking bookings now, because
. . .
As the screen hurriedly reverted to the studio set, Philly Nine lay back in his chair, closed his eyes and smiled.
I did that, he told himself smugly, with my little hatchet.
Â
WHOOOOOOSH!
The carpet streaked across the sky like a flat, embroidered meteor, skimming off satellite dishes and the older pattern of weather-vane as it went by sheer force of air displacement. The wonderful aerial view available over its side was wasted on Jane, who was lying flat on her face clinging on to two clenched handfuls of carpet. Justin had blacked out.
âWhere to, lady?'
Jane looked up, received an eyeful of fast-moving air and ducked down again. However, she saw enough in the fraction of a second's viewing time she had before the air-blast sandpapered her eyeballs to confirm to herself that there was nobody else on the damn rug but herself and the wimp. The voice was, therefore, entirely her imagination.
âNo, I'm not. I'm your automatic pilot for what I hope will prove to be a relaxing and pleasurable flight to the destination of your choice.'
âBugger off.'
âPardon me?'
âI said bugger off,' Jane barked over the howling of the turbulence. âI know you're just a hallucination inside my head, and I'm not standing for it. Go on, hop it, before I set my subconscious on to you.'
There was a pause. If it's possible for a pause to sound hurt, it did.
âYou're the boss,' said the voice (and for some reason, it didn't have to shout; it was as clear as a bell over the background noise). âHowever, I feel I should point out that I'm
not in any way a figment of your imagination. If it helps you to relate better, you can call me George.'
Jane set her jaw firmly. She refused absolutely to be drawn into conversation with her own unbalanced mind sitting on a flying rug doing close on Mach One at just above rooftop level over Croydon. Especially a part of her own unbalanced mind called George. Never lower your standards for anyone, as her mother used to say.
âTo explain,' George continued. âThe rectangular object you took to be a book is in fact a state-of-the-art carpet navigation system, compatible with all leading designs of magic floor coverings. Once installed on the carpet of your choice, the system automatically activates the carpet's propulsion and guidance systems, and receives directional input direct from your brainwave patterns by telepathic interfacing, made possible by our revolutionary fifth-generation textile chip technology. You said get me out of here fast, so . . .'
âI did?'
âYou thought it,' George corrected itself. âAnd that's good enough for me. Your wish is my -'
âNO!' Jane howled. âNot another one!'
âPardon me?'
âLook.' In her wrath, Jane knelt upright, oblivious to the enormous volume of nothing directly below. âI have had it up to here with bloody genies, all right? My wish is not your bloody command. To hear is not to obey, O mistress. Got that?'
âWe copy.'
âGood. Now get me down off this bloody contraption, fast as you like.'
George said nothing. The carpet continued flying straight and level, only appreciably faster. Had Jane been in
the mood, she could have glanced down and seen an Alp, real close.
âAre you deaf or something?'
âOn the contrary,' replied George affably. âAll our products have new enhanced sensor capability uprated to provide for instantaneous spoken inputting. This feature alone -'
âThen do as you're told and put me
down!
'
âSorry.'
For a count of maybe three Jane was, literally, speechless; partly because she was so angry she couldn't speak, partly because something small and airborne flew into her open mouth, and the momentum of the collision nearly knocked her over the side. She struggled to her knees again and thumped the carpet with her fist.
âWhat d'you mean, sorry? I told you -'
âYou told me,' George interrupted, âthat your wish was not my command, and that when I heard I shouldn't obey. You got it?'
âBut look, I didn't mean . . .'
âSorry. But you're the sentient being, I'm only a computerised guidance system. Policy formulation's down to you.' George paused, as if for effect. âYou guys are supposed to be good at that.'
âBut . . .'
âFurther clarification,' George continued, as they missed one snow-capped peak by a few thousandths of an inch, âwould, however, be appreciated. For example, when you say something, do you want me to ignore it completely or do the exact opposite?'
Jane blinked twice. âDo the opposite,' she said quickly. â
Don't
put me down. Fly
faster
.'
âThanks.'
The carpet flew on: same course, same momentum,
Jane screamed and clouted it with the heel of her shoe.
âJust checking,' said George. âYou told me to do the exact opposite. I'm programmed to disobey all orders, therefore I ignore you. That right?'
âNo. Yes. Both.'
âThank you.'
The carpet flew on.
Â
Kiss sat bolt upright. He felt as if a truck had just ploughed into the back of his neck.
Someone was calling him - someone frightened, in danger, in need of protection. No prizes for guessing who.
Bloody woman!
Moon of his delight, entrancing vision of sublime loveliness who gave a purpose to his existence, yes; but bloody woman nevertheless. What, he asked himself bitterly as he searched for his left shoe, has she gone and done now? Locked herself out of her car? Forgotten which level of the multi-storey she'd parked on? Something, he felt sure, like that.
Without dawdling, but without unduly frantic haste either, he dressed and put on his curly-toed shoes. As if, he muttered, he didn't have enough to do. Clean handkerchief. Where in buggery are the clean handkerchieves?
Let there be clean handkerchieves. Problem solved.
Not, he added, that we'll be able to do
that
for much longer. Oh no. And who'll come whizzing along across the tops of the clouds then whenever she's at the station and wondering whether she's left the gas on?
Pausing only to collect the milk off the doorstep, he somersaulted up into the sky, looped the loop and traipsed away through the empyrean.
Jane looked up.
On a scale of one to ten of Sensible Things To Do, that was maybe a Two; above putting your hand in a moving circular saw or enrolling in law school, but definitely below, say, investing in gilt-edged stock or leaving a burning oil refinery. She regretted it almost immediately.
Before the regret set in, however, making her stomach turn over like a well-tossed pancake and tightening her intestines into a small knot, she saw a broad, gently undulating expanse of sand. It might have been a beach somewhere, except that beaches tend to have blue edges, and this lot didn't. In fact, it didn't seem to have any edges whatsoever.
The desert.
Which desert, Jane neither knew nor cared. All that registered with her as relevant information was that she was probably a very long way from Haywards Heath.
âHelp,' she said.
Said rather than screamed; she was, at heart, a reasonably practical person, and there was nobody who could help her as far as the eye could see. That was assuming that Justin, who was beginning to come round, wasn't likely to be much use. On the basis of her experience of him so far, that seemed a pretty safe assumption.
Now then, she reassured herself, don't let's go all to pieces. Kiss'll be along in a moment, he'll switch this blasted thing off and we can all go home. My wish is his command, after all. And, she remembered, it was his bloody gadget that got her into this mess in the first place.
Having nothing better to do, she reflected for a while on that. Of all the stupid, careless things to do, she mused, leaving something like that lying about. She looked at the device, which was sitting smugly on the top edge of the
carpet. Perfectly reasonable to assume that it was a book. It looked exactly like a book: pages, spine, covers, the works. What sort of an idiot leaves something like that lying around, just begging innocent passers-by to pick it up and leave it on carpets?