âHere we are,' Angela was saying, âBoisdark Road. That's the address, isn't it?'
Chris nodded. âAbout halfway down on the right. I usually park on the petrol station forecourt; just opposite, look.'
Messrs Ackery & Slade, trading as Magical Mystery Tour: a hard sell at the best of times, but although they were notoriously reluctant to take more than one dozen of anything (except DW6, of course) he'd always got on well with Dennis and Frank. A plan of action started to take shape in his mind.
âHi, Dennis.' Big smile. âLook, can I use your phone? My battery's flat.'
No problem. He left Angela the trainee giving Dennis the BB27K spiel and darted into the stockroom. So far, so good.
So far and no further. The voice at the other end of the line was sorry, but Ms Ettin-Smith was out of the office for the rest of the day. Yes, they had her mobile number but they weren't authorised to disclose it. They would, of course, be overjoyed if he left a message for her and would pass it on as soon as she came in tomorrow morning; no, they couldn't pass on a message right now, as Ms Ettin-Smith had left strict instructions that she wasn't to be disturbed except in an emergency; no, they weren't prepared to accept his assurance that this was an emergency, and they'd be obliged if he wouldn't take that tone with them. So sorry. Have a nice day.
Chris hung up, feeling worried. Always the problem with policemen: never one around when you really need one. Ludicrous situation, he thought: there he was, doing the rounds with someone he had reason to suspect was in league with the Common Enemy of Man; a half-sensible human being would run a mile, hide, emigrate to somewhere comparatively safe, like Iraq or Afghanistan, instead of getting back in the car, the quite possibly enchanted car in which he'd very nearly been murdered less than twenty-four hours ago, and driving to Lichfield to sell yet more powdered water to the retail magic trade. Why? Because he was afraid that if he dropped everything and ran for it, he'd lose his job? Well, fine. A bit like refusing to leave a burning house because you haven't finished watering the plants.
I could do it, he thought; I could sneak out the back, get a bus into the town centre, find a travel agent, get myself booked on a flight to Switzerland (the only country in the world where magic doesn't work; nobody had ever managed to find out why, though it was generally reckoned that the banks had something to do with it), stay there until it's safe to come backâ
He shrugged. It was entirely feasible, but he couldn't do it, purely and simply because there was the possibility that he was wrong, and he wasn't being stalked by demons, which meant he'd be making a whole lot of inconvenient and disruptive fuss over nothing, and then he'd feel really
silly
. Quite. And, no doubt, that was probably the way people's minds had worked when there'd been a chance of stopping Hitler or containing the spread of the Black Death. Which was just another way of saying that people tend to get what they deserve; true, but massively unhelpful.
âDid you make your call?' The round, bearded face of Frank Ackery was beaming at him from the edge of the stockroom door.
Chris nodded. âThanks,' he said.
Frank grinned. âThat assistant of yours,' he said. âBit keen, isn't she?'
You could say that. âSorry,' Chris said. âIs she making a nuisance of herself?'
Shrug. âShe's sold Dennis two dozen of those parking spaces of yours, which I'd have thought was impossible, and now she's within an ace of talking him into five dozen pairs of winged sandals, even though we've got nine dozen of the Zauberwerke version on the shelf right behind your head, and you could grow potatoes in the dust.' Frank sighed. âFifteen years we've been in business together, I'd have sworn he was charmproof. She permanent, or what?'
Chris shook his head. âManagement trainee,' he replied. âJust getting a few weeks' experience in the trenches.'
âThank God for that,' Frank replied. âThe last thing this business needs is reps who actually sell us stuff.'
âQuite.'
That was the cheery badinage done with, but Frank didn't move; he was deciding whether to say something. âI gather you've had an exciting time of it lately.'
âWho told you that?'
âMy cousin Penny in Demon Control,' Frank replied. âLike your shirt, by the way.'
The polo shirt, with DS on the pocket. âNot mine,' Chris said. âBorrowed it fromâ'
âShe told me,' Frank went on, dropping his voice a little, âthat you've had a bit of aggravation from
them
.'
No need to ask who
they
were. âYes,' Chris said.
âSorry to hear it,' Frank said gravely. âBeen there,' he added. âNot nice. Did you ever know Billy Tomacek?'
âThe name's vaguely familiarâ'
Frank nodded. âMy best mate at school,' he said. âMarried my cousin Penny. The reason you recognise the name is, he was killed by demons about five years ago. The biggest bit of him they ever recovered fitted nicely on a microscope slide.'
âOh.'
âYou could say that, yes. Reason I bring it up is, before they killed him they'd been hassling him for weeks; turning up everywhere he went, that sort of thing. The first three times, he managed to give them the slip. He was a bright lad, Billy.'
âI see,' Chris said, his voice suddenly weak. âWhat happenedâ? '
Frank was silent for a moment. âWe're still not exactly sure,' he said. âHe left a message on Penny's phone at work to say he'd got her message and he'd see her there; which didn't make any sense, because she hadn't called him. So they took his answering machine apart and found it stank of demons; one of them must've got inside it and left a false message from Penny telling him to meet her somewhere. And that's where they were waiting for him.' He shrugged. âNo idea why, of course. It's like they picked him at random. The only link was Penny working for the department, but that's a bit tenuous, obviously.'
Quite, Chris thought; as far-fetched as his best friend being the head of the demon-hunters. âCoincidence?' he heard himself say.
âWe just don't know. The only other thing he said in his last message was something about Gandhi, which makes no sense at all. Anyway, when Penny told me about your spot of bother, I thought, I know him, he comes in our shop, next time I see him I'll tell him to keep his head down. So,' Frank added. âThink on.'
âYes,' Chris said feebly. âRight.'
âAlso.' A marked hesitation this time. âYou might find you have a use for these.' Frank dipped his fingers into the top pocket of his jacket and fished out a pair of sunglasses. âHere,' he said, âtry them.'
Chris frowned. âBut it's not very bright in here, Frank.'
âTry the fucking sunglasses, Chris.'
Put like that, how could he refuse? He took them, and noticed how heavy they felt, as though the frames were lead and the lenses inch-thick steel. He perched them on his nose. They hurt.
âFine,' he said, in a suffering-gladly voice. âSo what's the bigâOh.'
Frank was still there, still standing exactly where he'd been a moment ago, but there was a difference. To be precise, he had something sitting on his shoulder. It wasn't a bird, but it had wings. It most definitely wasn't human, though it had hands and feet and a more-or-less round head. âFrank,' Chris said quietly, âwhat's that on yourâ?'
Frank smiled at him. âMy constant companion,' he replied, âever since Billy died. Other people have chips on their shoulders when they're pissed off about something. You might say this is taking it to the next level.'
âFrankâ'
The thing, whatever it was, yawned, revealing three rows of upper-jaw teeth and four below. Eight eyes, and the lobes of its ears drooped like streamers. âIt's a Fury,' Frank said. âOh, there's loads of other names for them. It's a cross between a memory and an obligation, I guess you could say. Or an external conscience, maybe. Like I said, it came to live with me when Billy died, because he was my best friend and there wasn't anybody else. It'll stay there until I do something about his death; and, since I'm a coward, that means we're more or less stuck with each other. Actually, it's no bother; doesn't eat much, toilet-trained, you'd hardly know it was there; and nobody else can see it, of course. Not unless they're wearing the specs.'
Chris thought about that. âHardly any bother.'
Grin. âIt talks to me,' Frank said. âWhen we're alone. Reminds me. Really very polite and reasonable, you couldn't accuse it of making a fuss. It just says things like
pity Billy couldn't be here to see that
or
that's a good one, just wait till you tell Billy, no, sorry, I forgot, you can't.
The really bad thing is, you get used to it after a while. I feel a bit ashamed about that.'
The Fury stretched its wings, gently brushing Frank's cheek; it'd be like a brief itchy feeling, Chris supposed. Then it stuck its head under one wing and went to sleep.
âAnyway,' Frank said, âthat's the glasses for you. You'd be amazed what you can see with them on. Not a JWW product,' he added. âFeinwerkhaus of Vienna, pre-War; haven't been made for years, so they're pretty rare now. I'll have them back when you've finished with them, but right now I reckon your need's greater than mine.'
The pain in Chris's nose was getting tiresome; he slipped the glasses off, and at once the Fury disappeared. âCan they show upâ'
âDemons?' Frank nodded. âBut not all the time, which is a bit of a bummer. As I'm sure you know, demons don't hang around this dimension any more than they can help. Once they come through, of course, they're pretty obvious - you don't need smart specs to see them. Otherwise, when they're on the other side of the line waiting to come through, the specs aren't a lot of use, except for one thing. You get a sort of shimmer effect, a bit likeâOh, sod it,' he said, as the phone started to ring. âHang on, I'd better get that. Don't go away.'
While Frank was talking - just a bunch of yeses and I sees - Chris examined the sunglasses a little more closely. The frames looked like plain orange plastic, but he could just make out, in tiny raised letters on the sides of the arms, the letters DS.
âSorry about that,' Frank said, and his voice was distinctly strained. âAnyway, there you go, hope they'll be of some use to you. I'd better get back to the shop now, if that's OK.'
âHang on,' Chris said, âwhat about theâ?'
He was talking to an empty doorway. Odd, he thought, to break off like that just as he'd got to the useful bit. A sort of shimmer effect. Could mean anything.
Even so. Now he came to think of it, he had an idea he'd heard of something similar; not sunglasses, but a mirror, in which things were reflected as they truly were, not as they pretended to be. The same basic technology, presumably. In any event, he could see how they could come in very handy, and not just for identifying demons. Then he thought about the Fury, and it occurred to him that some things are best not seen.
He went back through into the shop. Frank was serving a customer - a refill for one of the old PP12N genie lamps, by the look of it - while Angela was showing off the new GF92 instant thunderstorm to a thoroughly dazed-looking Dennis Slade; wisely, she'd set it up inside an upturned goldfish bowl, and even from across the room he could see the lightning flashes piercing the inky black clouds. Frank won't like that, he thought. He'd bought fifteen of the old model last year, and even though the R&D people swore blind that they'd thoroughly debugged it and it was now possible to turn it offâ
Chris realised he was still holding the sunglasses. Quickly he slipped them into his pocket, almost as if he was afraid Frank would change his mind and ask for them back.
Give them back? No chance
. The thought crossed his mind the way a rabbit darts across the road in front of you, just before you jump on the brakes and listen to your tyres lose half their value. Stupid, he thought. If Frank wants them back, of course he'd return them. He just hoped very much that he wouldn't.
The replacement genie was being difficult about going into the bottle; the customer was holding tightly onto the lamp, while Frank tried to squash the little swirling blue cloud down into the spout with the palm of his gloved hand. Clearly a generous man; he'd misjudged him all these years. But then, he thought, I'd never have guessed about his long-term companion unless I'd seen it for myself. Something like that must do strange and terrible things to you.
A sort of shimmer effect. He tried to picture it. No, too vague.
âWell, now.' He realised Dennis Slade was talking to him. âI think that's everything. No, hang on, we haven't done the dried water. Better make it six dozen, we're down to our last carton. Been a hell of a run on it the last couple of weeks - if you hadn't been coming in today I'd have had to phone you. Can you talk to the warehouse, see if they can't hurry it up a bit?'
Chris wrote up the order in his book, deliberately taking his time, but Frank was still fully occupied with the genie; he'd managed to stuff it in head first, but its claws and tail appeared to have got stuck, like Winnie the Pooh in the rabbit hole, and Angela was giving Chris meaningful looks; come on, let's get out of here before they change their minds. Gandhi, he thought; and if that's a coincidence I'll eat my own head.
He couldn't stay in the shop any longer without drawing attention to himself, so he smiled, thanked Dennis Slade, asked him to get Frank to ring him about the thing they'd been talking about, and followed Angela back into the streetâ