âGood morning, sir. How can I help you?'
Next, reasoning that love of money is the root of all evil, they tried banks, building societies, stockbrokers and the like. That was all right for a while, but sooner or later the smell of money tended to get into everything, like the fumes in a chip-shop, and embassy workers began to find themselves losing their edge. Evil's one thing, they explained; dreary's another.
âUm, right, yes, hello,' Artofel replied. âActually, I've not come in to buy anything, it was the, er.'
âOf course, sir. If you'll just wait there, I'll see if there's anyone free.'
Next they tried newspaper offices, radio and TV stations, constituency party headquarters, town halls; all the places where evil is actually produced, packaged and distributed. Unfortunately, for some weird reason, nobody ever came; leaving the Topsiders to draw the startling conclusion that humans don't actually know where the stuff really comes from. So, everything back into tea-chests and cardboard boxes, and off we go again. It was getting to the point where most of each year's budget was going on relocation allowances, with nothing left over for buying souls or stoking the furnaces. There were economy drives, with slogans like
Is Your Torment Really Necessary?
and
Share a Pit of Burning Sulphur With a Friend
, but it was obvious that the problem wasn't just going to go away. The situation was going from bad to good, and something had to be done.
A door at the back of the shop opened, and Artofel's sensitive nose caught a tiny, almost unbearably nostalgic whiff of brimstone. He closed his eyes for a moment, realised he was wasting time, and headed for the door, passing the neat displays of cookers, radiators, boilers and associated wares; not to mention the shop's principal stock in trade . . .
âNice place you've got here,' he said.
âWe like it,' the embassy spokesman replied. âCome on through.'
It was at the last moment, when Flipside had been within an inch of closing the whole network and putting the whole system out to franchise, that the gas companies started using the neat, effective slogan:
at which point bells rang, pennies dropped and the Head of Department said, âWhy didn't we think of that before?' It would be, he said, a sort of logo, like the Lloyds Bank black horse or the Esso tiger.
âTake a seat,' said the official. âNow then, what's the problem?'
Artofel took a deep breath. âThis is going to sound a bit strange,' he warned.
âGood,' the official replied. âMake a nice change from all the pillocks who've lost their passports and expect us to fly them home free of charge. Fire away.'
Artofel glanced round at his surroundings. Pretty well what you'd expect: the usual set of Hieronymus Bosch prints, the little wire rack of tourist information stuff, the goat's skull hat-stand, even the same standard-issue wire trays, Dictaphone and stapler, identical with the ones on his desk back at his officeâ
His office.
He swallowed hard. âYou see,' he said, âI'm not actually human. I know I look like a human, a vicar even, but I'm not.'
âI see,' said the official; and at the extreme edges of his inflection there was a faint smear of the Gordon-Bennett-not-another-one voice that everyone who sits across a desk from the general public tends to use from time to time. âDo please continue.'
âYou don't believe me, do you?' Artofel sighed. âYou think I'm just another loony. Right?'
The official leaned back in his chair, fidgeting with a pencil. âSorry,' he said. âNo offence intended. And I am doing my level best to keep an open mind. It's just, you are the seventh one today, and all the others . . .'
Artofel shook his head. âI'm not saying I'm possessed by devils,' he replied impatiently. âI
am
one. And I can prove it, too.'
âYou can?' The official looked nervous, as if reliving some bad experience or other. Artofel couldn't help feeling a tiny pang of sympathy. Must be a rotten job, this.
âYes,' he replied, âI can, I can give you my computer access code, my screen number, my personnel file number, my security clearance code, the names and extension numbers of my five immediate superiors, the combination on my locker in the staff room and the serial number of the key to the seventh-floor executive loo. I can tell you which day in the month the canteen always does kedgeree, how many sugars the odd-job fiend on Floor Six has in his tea and which drawer of the third filing cabinet from the left in the Chief 's office sticks unless you push it in the right way. In fact, if you give me your name and number I can probably tell you how much you get paid and how many days' holiday you've got left this year. Will that do?'
The expression on the official's face was hard to describe; it was a bit like that of a man who's just seen incontrovertible proof that his electric kettle is in fact the head of MI5. As Artofel reeled off the numbers, and the same numbers flashed up on the screen in front of him, he had the strange feeling that somewhere, probably in a parallel universe, it was April the First and he'd just put his foot in a shoe full of custard.
âAll right,' he said eventually, âyou've made your point. So what are you doing wandering around down here dressed as a parson? On your way to a fancy-dress party or something?'
âI can also,' Artofel replied unpleasantly, âgive you the name of a very good friend of mine in the Personnel department who'd only have to say the word to get a smart-alec embassy clerk transferred to mucking out the Great Horseshit Lake in Circle Four so fast his hooves wouldn't touch. Understood?'
The official gulped and nodded. âSorry,' he said.
Artofel allowed him a thin, tight smile. âThat's okay,' he said. âJust doing your job, I know. Now, from what I can gather, there's been some sort of abysmal cock-up, and somehow I've exchanged bodies with this human vicar. Don't ask me how,' he added, raising a hand, âbecause I really have no idea. Logically, I've got to assume that the body sitting behind my desk at this very moment contains a mild-mannered Church of England minister who smokes a pipe and spends his free time train-spotting.You don't need me to tell you why that's the biggest security headache we've had since Doctor Faustus. Agreed?'
âQuite,' the official replied, his eyes suddenly round and wide. âI think the best thing I can do is put a call through to Head Office straight away. What do you think? Sir?' he added.
âYou do that,' Artofel sighed, putting his feet up on the desk and (obeying instincts that were not his own, but so what?) reaching in his pocket for his tobacco-pouch and matches. âCarry on. I'm not going anywhere.'
It took the official an awfully long time to get through; he was, after all, only a clerical grade, ranking somewhere in the hierarchy between a deputy pitchfork operative and the bloke whose job it was to follow round after the Great Beast with a dustpan and a shovel. In fact, he'd need to be promoted seven grades and go on a year's residential course just to be completely insignificant. Nevertheless, he was persistent; with the result that, after an hour and a half mostly spent listening to the Hold music, he put the phone back, turned to Artofel and grinned feebly.
âWhat you just told me,' he said, âabout your friend in the Personnel department.'
âHm?'
âDoes it have to be the Great Horseshit Lake?' he pleaded. âI mean, couldn't it be something equally degrading and horrid but not involving horses? It's just I have this thing about . . .'
Artofel frowned. âI take it,' he said, âit's not good news.'
âWell . . .'
âNot the Great Horseshit Lake. I promise.'
âNo,' the official said, breathing out, âit's not good news. I told them who you are and what you said to tell them, and they agree you're a very important person and it was all a complete accident and not your fault at all, they were quite categorical about that, no blame to you, none whatsoever. Butâ'
âMm?'
âThere's nothing they can do,' the official said, looking away. âNot without - and this is them talking, not me - not without causing far more trouble than you're worth, and they agree there's a slight security problem with having a vicar doing your job, but not, and remember I'm just passing on what they said to me, not enough to risk a major doctrinal incident just for the sake of some button-pusher. So I saidâ'
Artofel's eyes narrowed. âThey're leaving me here, then. Abandoning me. Is that it?'
The official nodded. âI said, could I speak to the deputy assistant controller, and the bloke said, already you're talking to the assistant deputy suffragan vice-principal, don't push your luck. So I thought . . .'
âDumped me,' Artofel said. âJust like that. After I've given them the worst years of my life, worked my talons to the bone . . .' He stopped, scowling, and looked up sharply. âThey're burying me,' he said. âBecause of the cock-up. Whatever it is, it's so big and smelly they're having to cover it up. Whitewash job. Get rid of the witnesses. Meaning me.'
âThey wouldn't do a thing like that, surely,' the official stuttered. âNot to one of us. Their own people. It's
unthinkable.
'
Artofel shrugged. âA week ago I'd have agreed with you,' he replied. âAll my working life, wherever you go in this business, ask anybody if there's one organisation who plays it straight down the middle, always tries to do the right thing, no funny stuff; they'd tell you Flipside, no question, straight as a die. You know,' he added, with a catch in his voice, âall these years, I
believed
in Flipside. I thought we
stood
for something, you know? I mean, if you can't trust Hell to abide by the rules, then who in blazes can you trust? And now this.' He sagged back in his chair like a disillusioned kipper and buried his head in his hands.
âThat's terrible,' muttered the official, horrified. âIt's the one thing they always say, the Devil looks after his own. I still can't bring myself to believe it.'
âTry harder,' Artofel growled from behind his hands. âAnd besides,' he went on, âyou're not the one who's being dumped on. From a great depth,' he added with feeling. âOr at least, not yet.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âThink about it.' Artofel leaned forward and grinned. âHow many people do you think know about this? Apart from the ones doing the whitewash, I mean?'
âWell, you, obviously,' the official said. âAnd . . . Oh my GoâThingy. You don't think . . .?'
âWhyever not?' Artofel shrugged his shoulders. âIf they can maroon a Duke of Hell without a second's hesitation, do you really believe they'd think twice about zapping some poxy little clerk in the Away service? Probably claim you'd defected, gone over to the Other Lot. Anything to whiten your name; makes it easier.'
The official sat very still. âHow long do you think it'll be,' he whispered, âbefore they . . .?'
âDon't ask me,' said Artofel. âLook, son, I'm sorry I got you into this, but I've got enough to worry about on my own account without you as well. If I were you, I'd grab my coat and hat and get out of here, quick sharp, PDQ.'
âYou're right.' The official was on his feet, scrabbling in his desk drawer and stuffing things into his pockets. âOh, why did it have to happen to
me
? It's not fair, really it isn't.'
Artofel smiled sadly. âNever heard it was supposed to be,' he said. âOh, and a word of advice. If you were thinking of taking a taxi, don't. A bus'd probably be all right, but keep your eyes open.'
âOh . . .' The official was struggling into his coat. âWhat about you?' he asked. âWhat're you going to . . .?'
âDon't ask,' Artofel interrupted. âAfter all, what you don't know, they can't beat out of you with rubber hoses. Mind how you go.'
âI will.'
The door closed behind him. Artrofel counted to twenty, stood up and walked round the desk until he was facing the computer screen. He sat down and flexed his fingers. There was a chance they hadn't cancelled all his codes yet; not the special ones he'd put in there, just for emergencies. That was one advantage of being overworked, taken for granted and indispensable; there were whole continents of the wages department network where nobody but Artofel ever went from one accounting period's end to the next, simply because everybody else went home bang on knocking-off time and left him to do all the clearing-up.
Well, it was his system, and it was about time it did him a favour for a change. Better the devil you know, and all that.
The code he used was a simple one, something he'd put in to make it possible for him to short-cut the tedious entry routines for when Management was screaming for the latest figures, on my desk in five minutes or there'll be the devil to pay, and he didn't have time to mess about. It worked very well for that purpose; it could also take him straight in through the side door, and nobody who wasn't looking at that precise spot would even know he was there. Just the ticket, he reassured himself. Here goes, and the Company Secretary take the hindmost.
Artofel punched the air, muttered âYes!' under his breath and thought hard. It was all very well sneaking into the haystack without setting off the alarms; now all he had to do was find the long, non-metallic, straw-coloured needle.
âThis way,' said the rat's voice, some way up the bag-dark tunnel. âMind your head.'