Wilt on High (33 page)

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Authors: Tom Sharpe

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But Flint’s achievement led beyond the courtroom to areas where discretion still prevailed.

‘She brought the stuff back from her cousins in California?’ spluttered Lord Lynchknowle when the Chief Constable visited him. ‘I don’t believe a word of it. Downright lie.’

‘Afraid not, old chap. Absolutely definite. Smuggled the muck back in a bottle of duty-free whisky.’

‘Good God. I thought she’d got it at that rotten Tech. Never did agree with her going there. All her mother’s fault.’ He paused and stared vacuously out across the rolling meadows. ‘What did you say the stuff was called?’

‘Embalming Fluid,’ said the Chief Constable. ‘Or Angel Dust. They usually smoke it.’

‘Don’t see how you can smoke embalming fluid,’ said Lord Lynchknowle. ‘Mind you, there’s no understanding women, is there?’

‘None at all,’ said the Chief Constable and with the
assurance that the coroner’s verdict would be one of accidental death he left to deal with other women whose behaviour was beyond his comprehension.

*

In fact it was at Baconheath that the results of Hodge’s obsession with the Wilt family were being felt most keenly. Outside the airbase Mavis Mottram’s group of Mothers Against The Bomb had been joined by women from all over the country and had turned into a much bigger demonstration. A camp of makeshift huts and tents was strung out along the perimeter fence, and relations between the Americans and the Fenland Constabulary had not been improved by scenes on TV of middle-aged and largely respectable British women being gassed and dragged in handcuffs to camouflaged ambulances.

To make matters even more awkward Mavis’ tactics of blockading the civilian quarters had led to several violent incidents between US women who wanted to escape the boredom of the base to go souvenir-hunting in Ipford or Norwich and MABs who refused to let them out or, more infuriatingly, allowed them to leave only to stop them going back. These fracas were seen on TV with a regularity that had brought the Home Secretary and the Secretary of State for Defence into conflict, each insisting that the other was responsible for maintaining law and order.

Only Patrick Mottram had benefited. In Mavis’ absence
he had come off Dr Kores’ hormones and had resumed his normal habits with Open University students.

*

Inside the airbase, too, everything had changed. General Belmonte, still suffering from the effect of seeing a giant penis circumcise itself and then turn into a rocket and explode, had been retired to a home for demented veterans in Arizona where he was kept comfortably sedated and could sit in the sun dreaming of happy days when his B52 had blasted the empty jungle in Vietnam. Colonel Urwin had returned to Washington and a cat-run garden in which he grew scented narcissi to perfection and employed his considerable intelligence to the problem of improving Anglo-American relations.

It was Glaushof who had suffered the most. He had been flown to the most isolated and radioactive testing ground in Nevada and consigned to duties in which his own personal security was in constant danger and his sole responsibility. And sole was the word. Mona Glaushof with Lieutenant Harah in tow had hit Reno for a divorce and was living comfortably in Texas on the alimony. It was a change from the dank Fenlands and the sun never ceased to shine.

*

It shone too on Eva and 45 Oakhurst Avenue as she bustled about the house and wondered what to have for supper. It was nice to have Henry home and somehow
more assertive than he had been before. ‘Perhaps,’ she thought as she Hoovered the stairs, ‘we ought to get away by ourselves for a week or two this summer.’ And her thoughts turned to the Costa Brava.

*

But it was a problem Wilt had already solved. Sitting in The Pig In A Poke with Peter Braintree he ordered two more pints.

‘After all I’ve been through this term I’m not having my summer made hellish in some foul camp site by the quads,’ he said cheerfully. ‘I’ve made other arrangements. There’s an adventure school in Wales where they do rock-climbing and pony-trekking. They can work their energy off on that and the instructors. I’ve rented a cottage in Dorset and I’m going down there to read
Jude The Obscure
again.’

‘Seems a bit of a gloomy book to take on holiday,’ said Braintree.

‘Salutary,’ said Wilt, ‘a nice reminder that the world’s always been a crazy place and that we don’t have such a bad time of it teaching at the Tech. Besides, it’s an antidote to the notion that intellectual aspirations get you anywhere.’

‘Talking about aspirations,’ said Braintree, ‘what on earth are you going to do with the thirty thousand quid this lunatic philanthropist has allotted your department for textbooks?’

Wilt smiled into his pint of best bitter. ‘Lunatic
philanthropists’ was just about right for the Americans with their airbases and nuclear weapons, and the educated idiots in the State Department who assumed that even the most ineffectual liberal do-gooder must be a homicidal Stalinist and a member of the KGB – and who then shelled out billions of dollars trying to undo the damage they’d done.

‘Well, for one thing I’m going to donate two hundred copies of
Lord of the Flies
to Inspector Flint,’ he said finally.

‘To Flint? Why him of all people? What’s he want with the damned things?’

‘He’s the one who told Eva I was out at …’ Wilt stopped. There was no point in breaking the Official Secrets Act. ‘It’s a prize,’ he went on, ‘for the first copper to arrest the Phantom Flasher. It seems an appropriate title.’

‘I daresay it does,’ said Braintree. ‘Still, two hundred copies is a bit disproportionate. I can’t imagine even the most literate policeman wanting to read two hundred copies of the same book.’

‘He can always hand them out to the poor sods at the airbase. Must be hell trying to cope with Mavis Mottram. Not that I disagree with her views but the bloody woman is definitely demented.’

‘Still leaves you with a hell of a lot of new books to buy,’ said Braintree. ‘I mean, it’s all right for me because the English Department needs books but I shouldn’t have thought Communication and –’

‘Don’t use those words. I’m going back to Liberal Studies and to hell with all that bloody jargon. And if Mayfield and the rest of the social-economic structure merchants don’t like it, they can lump it. I’m having it my way from now on.’

‘You sound very confident,’ said Braintree.

‘Yes,’ said Wilt with a smile.

And he was.

This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

Version 1.0
Epub ISBN 9781446474754
www.randomhouse.co.uk
Published by Arrow Books in 2004
7 9 10 8 6
Copyright © Tom Sharpe, 1984
Tom Sharpe has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 to be identified as the author of this work
This is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
First published in the United Kingdom in 1984 by Secker & Warburg Ltd
Arrow Books
The Random House Group Limited
20 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London, SW1V 2SA
www.rbooks.co.uk
Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at:
www.randomhouse.co.uk/offices.htm
The Random House Group Limited Reg. No. 954009
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 9780099466482

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