âSakubona, inkosazana.'
Bianca did a quick Zebedee impression, looked down and saw a little, wizened man curled up in her chair. He was wearing a leopard skin with lots of unusual accessories, and holding a fly-whisk.
âHi,' she replied. âYou must be Nkunzana. I didn't hear you come in.'
âNo,' the witch-doctor replied, âyou didn't.' He nodded towards the statues. âImpressive,' he said.
âAll my own work,' Bianca replied, flustered. âYou know what you've got to do?'
âIs the Pope a Catholic?'
âRight. Well, I'd better leave you to it, then. Do you need anything? Um, hot water, towels, that sort of thing?'
Nkunzana shook his head. âA fire and a pinch of dust, my sister,' he replied. Before Bianca could offer further assistance, he produced a big brass Zippo from the catskin bag hung round his neck.
âDust?'
Nkunzana grinned and drew a fingertip across the surface of the table beside his chair. âI know,' he said. âI remind you of your mother.'
âIn certain respects,' Bianca replied. âShe could never have worn leopard, though. Not with her colouring.'
The witch-doctor shrugged; then, with a tiny movement of his thumb he lit the lighter, sprinkled the dust and mumbled something that Bianca didn't quite catch.
And...
...
Action
!
Â
Cut to -
Kurt's Nissen hut (you could call it the Galleria Lundqvist, but not, if you want to see tomorrow, while he's listening) where fifteen statues with strong West Midland accents are telling him exactly why they refuse to have anything at all to do with his plan.
Sound effects; rushing wind, a shimmering tinkly sound (shorthand for magic), deep and rumbling unworldly laughter, followed byâ
Silence. The other noises off were just meretricious effects, the parsley garnish on a slice of underdone magic. But the silence, the absence of querulous whining, that's something else. Uncanny is an understatement in the same league as describing the Black Death as a nasty bug that's going around.
Kurt reacts; he says -
âYIPPEE
!
'
- and so would you if you'd just spent several weeks cooped up with Mrs Blanchflower, Mr Potts and thirteen others, extremely similar. In their place, fifteen of the world's finest, most exquisite statues; solid masonry from head to toe, without enough sentience between the lot of them to animate a DSS counter clerk. Kurt looked round, gazing ecstatically at each one in turn; compared to him, stout Cortes would have made one hell of a poker player. No more whingeing. No more threats to report him to the English Tourist Board. No more caustic remarks about the lack of brown sauce to go with the escalops of veal.
Slowly, almost like a moon-walker in the deliberation of his movements, Kurt got to his feet, crossed the floor and picked up a frozen tiramisu he'd been defrosting for tonight's dinner. Then he planted himself in front of the Canova, stuck his tongue out, raised the tiramisu and rubbed it into the statue's face.
Â
Cut to -
Bianca's studio. Bianca has just left, leaving the door unlocked and a note.
Cue sound effects, as above, except for the silence. Instead, fade in a yammering fugue of West Midland voices raised in pique. And hold it, as -
The statues realise something has changed. Typically thoughtful, Bianca has left a big, clothes-shop style mirror facing them. They see themselves. Let's repeat that line, for emphasis. They see ...
Themselves
...
Silence.
And then one of them - yes, absolutely right, it's Mrs Blanchflowerâsays -
âWell
!
'
- and they all start talking at once. No need to report the exact words spoken; the gist of it is that they're all as pleased as anything to be out of those ridiculous, freezing cold, uncomfortable statues and back in their own bodies again,
but
that doesn't alter the fact that they've been mucked about something terrible (with hindsight, scrawling
Sorry for any inconvenience
on the mirror in lipstick wasn't the most tactful thing Bianca ever did) and just wait, someone hasn't heard the last of this, my lawyers, my husband, my Euro MP...
At the back of the room, a scruffy heap which at first sight was only a bundle of old rags sits up, double-takes and huddles down again, furtively pulling a mangy leopard skin over his head and hoping to hell they haven't spotted him. Too lateâ
With a simultaneous yowl of fury, fifteen angry ex-statues turn on Nkunzana, shaking fists and demanding explanations. The witch-doctor freezes, unable to move. In the course of his professional activities, he's daily called upon to face down swarms of gibbering unquiet spirits, quell mobs of loutish ghosts by sheer force of personality, command fiends and boss about the scum of twelve dimensions. Piece of cake. Faced with Mrs Blanchflower and the other Sadley Grange victims, he's a mongoose-fazed snake.
Spirits,
he hisses under his breath,
I command you by Nkulunkulu, the Great One,
get
me the hell out of here!
The spirits attend, as they are bound to do when a master of the Art orders them. Although only the
isangona
can see them, they're there, as present as a college of notaries, standing at the back of the room looking extremely embarrassed.
Sorry, amakhosi,
they mouth noiselessly.
This time, you're on your own.
Â
Cut to -
A police station on the very northernmost edge of China. Behind the desk, a sergeant slumbers dreamlessly under a circular fan.
The door opens. Enter three very embarrassed-looking men.
They wake the sergeant, who grunts and reaches for his notebook and a pen. What, he enquires, can he do for them?
They nudge each other. Imploring looks are exchanged. Nobody wants to be the one who has to say it.
A spokesman is finally selected. He clears his throat. The expression on his face is so pitiful the desk sergeant starts groping instinctively for a clean handkerchief.
We'd like, the spokesman mumbles, to report a theft.
Right. Fine. What's been nicked?
A wall.
Sorry?
A wall. Quite a big wall, actually.
Look, sorry about this, did you just say somebody's stolen a
wall?
That's right. Here, come and see for yourself.
Bemused policeman rises, totters sleepily round the edge of the counter to the station door, looks out.
Look, is this some sort of a joke, because if it is ...
And then he sees the mountains. And that's really
weird,
because everybody knows you can't see the mountains from here. Because the Wall's in the way. Further up the valley, yes, you can see the mountains. Down here ...
The sergeant begins to scream.
Â
Cut toâ
A brain-emptying vastness of sand, where the reflected heat hits you like a falling roof. Shimmering in the heat-haze, the sun flickers like an Aldis lamp. No wicked stepmother's smile was ever as cruel as the unvarying blue of the pitiless sky. Sun and sand; yes, sun and sand we got, but you really don't want to come here for two weeks in August.
Deserts are, by definition, big; and this is a big desert.
The dragon, waiting in the shade of the huge stack of cardboard boxes that contains the Great Wall of China for his scheduled rendezvous with Chubby and the boys, looks tiny; from a distance you'd think he was a wee lizard, the sort of thing desert travellers evict from their boots every morning before setting out.
But that's perspective playing tricks on you, because the dragon is, of course, huge. And, more to the point, quite incredibly strong. Maybe you haven't yet realised how strong the dragon is; well, consider this. Between one and five am last night, this dragon single-handedly dismantled the Great Wall and lugged it here, boxful by boxful across the Gobi Desert, without making a sound or disturbing anybody. No real trouble; to the dragon, it was just like picking up so much Lego off the living-room carpet.
It was still, nevertheless, one hell of a lot of Lego, and the effort, combined with the heat, is making him sleepy. His soul (for want of a better word) is hovering in the middle air, looking down at the stack of boxes and thinking, Pretty
neat, huh
?
Then, suddenly, it starts to panic. Instinctively it makes to dart back into its body, but it can't. Imagine that nauseating feeling when you've just stepped outside to get the milk in and the front door slams shut behind you, locking you out. Normally, the dragon's soul would have the door kicked in and be back inside in twenty seconds flat. But this time, what with purloining walls all night and not getting much sleep while it was at it, it simply hasn't got the strength. Which is unfortunate, because ...
Â
Cut to -
Saint George, toiling wearily up a vast sand escarpment, on his way to the scheduled rendezvous with Chubby, the boys and a billion tons of hooky masonry.
He feels - strange ...
Oh look, he mutters to himself, I'm flying.
Or at least part of me is. The rest of me - head, arms, torso, legs - is down there on the deck, flat on my face ...
Â
(
Cue rushing wind, shimmering tinkly sound, shorthand for magic, deep and rumbling unworldly laughter
. . .)
Â
Nkunzana, moving with remarkable agility for a man of his advanced years, shinned out of the bathroom window, dropped five feet onto the fire escape, clattered down the steps like a ten-year-old and sprinted across the alleyway to where Kurt had the van parked, engine running.
âQuick!' he panted. No need to explain further. There was a squeal and a smell of burning rubber.
âOkay?' Kurt asked, glancing down at the road map open on his knee.
âNo,' snapped the witch-doctor, âit isn't. You might have warned me.'
âWarned you?' Kurt grinned. âHey, man, I wouldn't insult you. I mean, you being a witch-doctor and all, I'd have thought you'd have
known...'
âThe hell with you, white boy. Let's see if it's so funny when I've turned you into a beetle.'
Feeling that the conversation was becoming a little unfocused, Bianca interrupted. âWhat Kurt meant to say was,' she said, âis everything going to plan? With the, um, spirits, I mean?'
âHuh?' Nkunzana frowned, then nodded. âSure, no problem. The fifteen dead people are out of the stolen statues and into the statues you made for them. The same with the souls of the dragon and Saint George; I've conjured them out of their bodies, and the dragon'll be too knackered after all that heavy lifting he's been doing...'
The old man paused, his eyes tight shut, and chuckled. âHey, man,' he muttered, âthis is
fun.
I really wish you could see this.'
Â
Cut toâ
Three disembodied spirits, hovering in the upper air.
The first is the dragon, scrabbling frantically at the door of his magnificent, wonderful, all-powerful body. But he's too weak. He can't open the damn thing.
The second is Saint George, also unexpectedly evicted from his body by the Zulu doctor's magic. Not
his
body, strictly speaking; remember, he's been dossing down in the statue Bianca made for Mike to live in, which he stole when the dragon carbonised him on his return from the future.
George is just about to nip back in when he realises he's not the only disembodied spook out and about this fine Mongolian summer morning. A mere hundred miles or so to his west, he becomes aware of the soul of his oldest, greatest enemy, and, more to the point, the empty dragon body.
He hesitates. He thinks.
YES!
Well, wouldn't you? Think it over. Yours for the hijacking, the most powerful, the strongest, the most stylish, the fastest, the most heavily armed and armoured, the slinkiest piece of flesh ever in the history of the Universe, with the doors unlocked and the keys in the ignition. One swift, slick job of taking and driving away, and then we'll see exactly who's vapourising whom ...
With a none too gentle shove and a merry shout of, âMove over, asshole!', George heaved the dragon's enervated soul out of the way, scrambled into the dragon body and hit the gas. There was a roar and a stunning thump, as the beast's enormous wings scooped up air like ice-cream from the tub. Wild with fury and terror, the dragon's soul scrabbled desperately at its own body, but there was no way in. A fraction of a second later, the body had gone.
âShit,' whimpered the dragon. He collapsed onto the sand and started to quiver.
The third spirit in waiting is Bianca's friend Mike. He has the advantage over the other two of knowing what's going on, and the moment George abandons his earthly overcoat and makes his dash for the dragon costume, Mike lets himself quietly out of Saint George, marble statue by Bianca Wilson, and tiptoes across the middle air to where his own familiar shape is standing, vacant and unlocked, among the dunes. He drops in. He rams the legs into first gear. He scrams.
And now the dragon's soul is alone. Ebbing fast, still weak from his exertions and the devastating trauma of watching his own body zooming off over the horizon with his mortal enemy at the controls, he flickers on the edge of dissolution. Why bother? he asks himself. Bugger this for the proverbial duffing up to nothing.
But not for long. Because dragons don't quit. And, as the saying goes, a third-class ride beats the shit out of a first-class walk. There, abandoned on the escarpment of a dune, stands Bianca Wilson's statue of Saint George, empty. Disgusted but grimly determined, the soul of the last of the great serpents of the dawn of the world drags itself through the dry, gritty air and flops wretchedly into George.