21.
Landen Parke-Laine
The manufacture of robots, automatons and assorted
mechanical people is undertaken by the Duplex Corporation, situated
on the border of Sci-Fi and Fantasy. Most automata are energy cell
powered these days, but the factory still produces a “Classic” line
of clockwork men to satisfy clients who require something more
retro. Despite problems with emotion, adverse wear and the
continual windings, the Duplex range of robots (currently in its
fifth incarnation) remains popular. Tours of the factory by
arrangement.
Bradshaw’s BookWorld Companion (6th
edition)
I knocked twice. There was the sound
of noises from within, and the door opened. It was Landen, and we
stared at each other for a few seconds.
“Hello,” I said.
“Hello,” said Landen.
“Hello,” I said again.
“Are you her?” he asked.
“No, not really.”
“Then you’d better come in.”
He moved aside, and I stepped into the hallway that
was familiar to mine, but only in layout. Thursday’s real house was
more real, more worn, more lived in. The banisters were chipped,
the newel post was draped with discarded clothes, and a tide mark
of children’s fingerprints ran along the wall and up the staircase.
Pictures hung askew, and there was a small cobweb around the
lampshade. Landen led me through to the kitchen, which was a big
extension at the back of the house, partly consuming the garden and
covered with a large glazed roof above the junk-strewn kitchen
table. It was packed with the chaotic assortment of the minutiae of
life being lived—not the sanitized shorthand we get in the
BookWorld, even with the Reader Feedback Loop set to max. Life
seemed to be a lot messier than people wanted fiction to be.
Feedback reflected hopes, not realities. I looked around carefully
and sat in the seat he had indicated.
“Tea?” he asked.
“Do I drink it?”
“Gallons of it, usually.”
“At a single sitting?”
“No, generally one cup at a time.”
“Then I’d love some, thank you.”
He went to put the kettle on.
“You look a lot like Thursday,” he said.
“I’m often mistaken for her,” I replied, feeling
less nervous around familiar questions. “In fact, I’m surprised you
needed so little convincing I wasn’t the real Thursday.”
“I don’t know that for certain,” he replied. “Not
yet anyway. I’d like you to be her, naturally, but there have been
others who looked a lot like her. Not quite as much as you do, but
pretty similar. Goliath is keen to know what Thursday gets up to
when she’s not at home, and they’ve sent one or two to try to trick
me into giving information. The first was just a voice on the
phone, then one who could be seen only from a distance. The last
one almost took me in, but up close she didn’t pass muster. Her
texture was all wrong, the smell was different, the smile lopsided
and the ears too high. I don’t know why they keep sending them, to
be honest—nor where they end up. After I booted the last one out
the door, someone from Goliath’s Synthetic Human Division came
round demanding to know what I’d done with it. Then, after I asked
about the legality of such a device, he denied there had been any,
or even that he was from the Synthetic Human Division. He then
asked to read the meter.”
“So how can they lose two synthetic
Thursdays?”
“They lost three. There was another that I
hadn’t even seen. They said it was the best yet. They dropped it
off two weeks ago near Clary-LaMarr and haven’t heard anything
since. Are you that one?”
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes,” I replied, vaguely indignant. “I’m not a
Goliath robot.”
“Not a robot—a synthetic. Human in
everything but name.”
I took a deep breath. I had to lay my cards on the
table. “She’s missing, isn’t she?”
There was a flicker of consternation on Landen’s
face. “Not at all. Her absences are quite long, admittedly, but
we’re always in constant communication.”
“From the BookWorld?”
He laughed. “That old chestnut! It was never
proved she could move across at will. I think you’ve perhaps
spent a little too much time listening to deranged theories.”
It sounded like a cover story to keep the real
nature of the BookWorld secret. I didn’t expect him to tell me
anything. He didn’t know who or what I was, after all. But he had
to know.
“I’m the written her,” I told him. “She may
have spoken to you about me. I was the tree-hugging version in the
Great Samuel Pepys Fiasco, who then took over from the evil
Thursday who was deleted with Pepys. I run books one to five
now—less along the lines of the old Thursday, but more how the real
Thursday wanted them to be. Less sex and violence. It explains why
we’re out of print.”
If I thought he would be surprised or shocked,
however, I was mistaken. I guess when you’re married to Thursday,
the nature of weird becomes somewhat relative. Landen smiled.
“That’s a novel approach. Mind you, there’s nothing
you’ve told me that I couldn’t find out by rereading First Among
Sequels. Goliath has access to that book, too, so if you
were one of the synthetic Thursdays, I’d expect you to come
up with something like that.”
“Commander Bradshaw of Jurisfiction sent me.”
He stared at me. The relevance wasn’t lost on him.
Jurisfiction and Bradshaw were never mentioned in the books.
“I’m not yet convinced,” he said, giving nothing
away, “but let’s suppose Thursday is missing—you want my
help to find her?”
“If she’s missing, then you and I can help each
other. I’ll be going home in less than twelve hours. Any
information learned out here might be helpful.”
He took a deep breath. “She’s been gone four weeks,
that much is common knowledge. Everyone wants to find her. It’s a
national obsession. The Mole, The Toad, Goliath, SO-5, the
police, the Cheese Squad, the government, the NSA—and now you claim
the BookWorld, too.”
“Do you have any idea where she is?”
He poured the boiling water into the teapot.
“No. And the thing is,” he added, looking at the
clock, “we need to resolve this one way or another pretty
soon.”
“Because of the police and the NSA and
whatnot?”
Landen laughed. “No, not them. The kids.
Friday won’t get away from his shift at B&Q until six, but
Tuesday will be home in two hours, and although my mind has been
rendered as supple as custard when it comes to things Thursday, the
kids are still at an impressionable age—besides, I don’t think the
doors in the house will take much more slamming.”
And he smiled again, but it was sadder, and more
uncertain.
“I understand.”
“Do you? Can you?”
“I think so.”
“Hmm,” he said, pondering carefully, “does anyone
else know you’re here?”
“Cordelia Flakk’s the only one we need to worry
about.”
“That’s bad,” he murmured. “Flakk’s the worst
gossip in the city. I’ve a feeling you’ve less than forty minutes
before the press starts to knock at the door, two hours before the
police arrive with an arrest warrant and three hours before
President van de Poste demands you hand over the plans.”
“What plans?”
“The secret plans.”
“I don’t have any secret plans.”
“I’d keep that to yourself.”
He poured out the tea and placed it in front of me.
He was standing close to me, and I felt myself shiver within his
proximity. I wanted to take him in my arms and hug him tightly and
breathe in great lungfuls of Landen with my face buried in his
collar. I’d dreamed of the moment for years. Instead I did nothing
and cursed my restraint.
“Does Thursday know the president?”
“He often seeks her counsel. Thursday?”
“Yes?”
“How like her are you?”
I rolled up my sleeve to reveal a long scar on my
forearm. “I don’t know how I got that one.”
“That was Tiger.”
“Was Tiger a tiger?”
“No, Tiger was a leopard. Your mother’s. Only Mrs.
Next would name a leopard Tiger. May I?”
“Please do.”
He looked at my scalp where there was another scar,
just above my hairline.
“That was Norman Johnson at the close of the 1989
Super-Hoop,” I said. “Something Rotten, page 351.
He went and sat at the other end of the table and
stared at me for a while.
“You even smell like her,” he said, “and rub your
forehead in the same way when you’re thinking. I have a lot of
respect for Goliath, but they never got synthetics this
good.”
“So you believe I’m the written one?”
“There’s another possible explanation.”
“Who would I be if not Goliath or the written
one?”
He looked at me for a long time, an expression of
concern on his face. I understood what he was trying to say.
“You think I might be Thursday, but
suffering some sort of weird delusion?”
“Stranger things have happened.”
“I’ve spent my entire life in books,” I explained.
“I’m really only five years old. I can remember popping out of the
character press as plain old D8-V-67987, and my first day at St.
Tabularasa’s. I did well, so I was streamed into the First-Person
fast-track program. Long story short, I look after the Thursday
books one to five but also work for JAID—that’s the Jurisfiction
Accident Investigation Department. I can tell you about Sprockett
and Carmine, and how Lorina/Pickwick doesn’t approve of her
bringing goblins home and likes to bore us stupid by quoting Latin
mottos, and the new book that arrived in the neighborhood. And
there’s Bradshaw, and the metaphor shortage, and Jobsworth wanting
me to go up-country to help deal with Speedy Muffler in the peace
talks on Friday. That’s me. I’m not Thursday. I’m nothing
like her. Show me a frightening situation and I’ll run a mile.
Square will vouch for me.”
And I called his name, but there was no
answer.
“Right,” I said, wondering where he’d gone. “That
makes me look stupid.”
We both fell silent, and Landen stared at me for a
long time once more. I saw his eyes moisten, and mine spontaneously
did the same.
“I so want to be her,” I sniffed as my eyes blurred
with tears. “But I’m not.”
Before I knew it, I had discovered what crying
actually means when you do it for real. He gave me his handkerchief
and hugged me, and I responded by wrapping my arms around his neck.
It felt wonderful. Natural—like two parts in a jigsaw. When
I had calmed down, he gently took my hands from around him and held
them in his, gazing into my eyes.
“Here’s the thing,” he said at last. “If you’re
not the real Thursday, we must come clean to the kids and
explain that you’re not. I can’t have them being disappointed
again. But if you are the real Thursday, you must stay so we
can look after you. It’s possible that you just think you’re
not Thursday. All that stuff about the BookWorld—it could be Aornis
up to her tricks again.”
“Aornis, sister of Acheron?”
He raised an eyebrow. “How many children do
Thursday and I have?” he asked.
“Two.”
“That’s in your favor as the written Thursday.
Aornis gave the real Thursday a mindworm so she thought she
had a third child—another daughter—and Thursday was always worrying
about her. We helped her by pretending there was, and occasionally,
in lucid moments, she would realize what was going on. Then she’d
forget and was worrying about her missing daughter again.”
I tried to imagine what it might be like having a
child who was a figment but could not. If Aornis was anything like
the written Acheron, she was pretty unpleasant. Still, I was kind
of glad I didn’t know about the extra daughter. I had an
idea.
“T minus pumpkin in ten hours,” I said, consulting
my watch. “If you see me vanish in front of your eyes will you
believe I’m from the BookWorld?”
“Yes,” he said, “I’ll believe you. But if you don’t
vanish, will you believe that you might be Thursday except .
. . well, nuts?”
“I could be the missing Goliath synthetic
Thursday,” I said, “with a well-researched cover story.”
Landen smiled. “Being married to you has never been
boring.”
I was pondering over the consequences of being
either mad or synthetic when Thursday’s mother arrived.
“Thursday!” she squealed, having let herself in.
“You naughty girl! Where have you been?”
The real version of my mother was quite different
from the written one. The real one was a lot older—at least
seventy, by my guess, but didn’t seem to have lost any of her
youthful vigor. She was a little gray, a little hunched and a
little odd.
“Here for long?” she asked.
“Only until midnight,” I managed to mutter.
“Shame!” she said, then turned to Landen. “Is this
one of the synthetics?”
“The jury’s still out.”
Mrs. Next walked up close and peered at me through
her spectacles, as one might regard a stubborn stain on the
carpet.
“It’s very lifelike. Does she have the
scars?”
Landen nodded.
“I know how to check,” she said, and cut me a slice
of Battenberg cake. “Here,” she said, and handed it over. “Your
favorite.”
I took a large bite, and even though it had some
paste inside that was almost indescribably nasty, I smiled politely
and tried to eat it as quickly as I could.
“Very nice,” I managed to say.
“Hmm,” said Mrs. Next, “that doesn’t sound like her
at all. Thursday hates marzipan.”
“Is that what it was?” I said, running to the sink
to spit it out. I knew I didn’t like it, I just didn’t know what it
was. I had thought Marzipan was the name of a boy band.
“Hmm,” said my mother, “this doesn’t really help.
Hating it does make her Thursday, but pretending to like it
to spare my feelings definitely does not make her
Thursday.”
“It’s a tricky one,” agreed Landen.
They eyed me for a long time as they tried to
figure out what to do and how best to tell if I was the real one or
the written one. Nothing I could say would convince them of either
alternative, and the only way to truly know—if I vanished at
pumpkin hour—was a bit pointless, since by then I would no longer
be around for them to answer any questions I might have, which was
a bit like devising a 100 percent destructive test for counterfeit
tenners.
The doorbell rang.
“That will be the first of your fan club,” said
Landen, and he went off to answer it.
“So,” said Mrs. Next, “loopy, fictional or
synthetic. Which would you prefer?”
“Loopy, I guess,” I said sadly.
“Me, too. But the shitstorm that will be unleashed
when you get back is not something I’d like anyone to face.
President van de Poste won’t be able to make his Anti-smite Shield
without you and the secret plans, and as a key witness in the
Stiltonista cheese-smuggling trial, you’ll need round-the-clock
protection. And that’s before we get into the fun Goliath has in
store for you.”
“She made a few enemies, right?”
“Only a few thousand. Start causing trouble amongst
the criminal fraternity and no end of unfair retribution starts
coming your way. Would you excuse me? I must avail myself of the
facilities. The bad plumbing needs to meet the bad plumbing, so to
speak.”
And she tottered off in the direction of the
downstairs loo.
I sat there for a moment unsure of what to think or
do. I called out to Square but to no avail, then heard a noise. I
looked up and noticed that the broom-cupboard door was ajar.
Looking at me through the crack were two bright eyes. The door
opened a little farther, and a small girl aged about eight stepped
out. She was like the spirits I had seen around the place—that is
to say, mildly transparent. I could see the bottle of Brasso on the
shelf directly behind her.
“You’re the last person I want to see,” I said as
my heart fell.
“That’s not a very nice thing to say,” said the
girl.
“Let me guess,” I said. “You’re the
mindworm.”
“I prefer Jenny,” said Jenny indignantly. “Who are
you?”
“If I can see you, I guess I’m the real
Thursday—just insane. Still, at least this way I don’t have to
worry about Carmine and the goblin anymore.”
“You’re not insane,” said Jenny, “and you’re not
Thursday either.”
“I could be making you up,” I remarked, “and making
up your denial, too.”
She shook her head.
“Creating figments like me takes a serious amount
of effort, and you’re not that good.”
“Thanks. Insulted by someone’s else’s
delusion.”
“Jenny.”
“Jenny, then. So how can I see you?”
“You’re not seeing just me, are you?”
“No,” I said, “there are others. Lots of
them.”
“Then you see what I mean. What does Landen think
you are?”
I shrugged. “The real Thursday mad, I think.”
“Don’t upset him,” said Jenny. “Thursday wouldn’t
like it.”
“Thursday could be dead.”
“I know for a fact that she isn’t.”
“How?”
But at that moment Landen came pacing down the
corridor, and Jenny jumped back into the broom cupboard.
“That was your old buddy Lydia Startright, wanting
to get an exclusive before the network vans turn up. I told her you
weren’t here and I had no idea where you were.”
“Did she believe you?”
“She’s an excellent journalist—of course
not.”
We sat in silence for some moments. I didn’t think
I would tell him I’d just seen Jenny, but the seeds of doubt had
been sown. I could be the real Thursday. And even though the
ramifications of being someone suffering bizarre delusions were
not good news, the possibility that I would be with the man
I loved was some consolation.
“Ask me some questions,” I said finally. “I want to
convince myself I’m not her.”
“What’s my middle name?” he asked.
“Is it . . . Whitby?”
“Not even close. Where was our first date?”
“At the Alhambra. The Richard III thing.”
“No, that was later. Where did I lose my
leg?”
“You’ve lost a leg?”
Mrs. Next came back into the room. “You never told
me you’d bought a gold-plated toilet.”
Landen frowned. “We don’t have a gold-plated
toilet.”
“Oh, dear,” said Mrs. Next. “I think I’ve just peed
in your tuba.”
She then muttered something about “the shocking
price of dodo feed” and went out without saying good-bye to either
of us.
“Daft as a brush,” said Landen, “and just a
teeny-weeny bit repulsive.”
“Plock.”
I turned. A dodo stood at the open door. It was
nothing like the Pickwick/Lorina back home. This dodo was
old. Her beak was worn and scaly, she had no feathers, and
her left foot had a tremor. She was dressed in an all-over body
warmer made of fleecy material and was regarding me
curiously.
“Pickwick?”
“Plock?” said the dodo, cocking her head to one
side. She walked unsteadily up to me and looked very closely at me
for a long time.
“Plock, plock,” she said, and rubbed her beak
affectionately on my trouser leg before walking over to her water
dish.
“Pickwick thinks you’re real.”
“Pickwick has a brain the size of a petit
pois.”
“True.”
The doorbell went again.
“That will be the Toad News Network.”
As soon as he had gone, the broom-cupboard door
opened again.
“Has he gone?” asked Jenny.
I nodded.
“Right, then. I’ll show you what I mean about
Thursday not being dead. Come with me.”