“But the imperial agent seized everything. Boudicca was flogged and her daughters were raped. Because of this insult, and because of Roman oppression, the Iceni rebelled against the Romans and Boudicca led an armed uprising against Suetonius Paulinus and his legions. The Iceni slaughtered the Roman garrisons in St Albans and Colchester, and then they attacked London and razed it to the ground.
“Boudicca had six or seven Druid advisers – one of them a very mystical senior Druid whose name nobody knows. In AD 61 the Romans were hunting down and killing the last of the Druids and these Druids had come to Boudicca looking for protection. They were very educated, the Druids. They had a written language and they believed in the immortal soul.
“Boudicca’s Druid advisers predicted by the entrails of their victims and by the flight of ravens that she and her army would be annihilated. So the senior Druid taught Boudicca how to open up doors to other existences.”
“How do we know this?” asked Josh.
“Because one of the Druids wrote it down. They wrote something like, ‘Boudicca lit three tapers. She consumed henbane and passed into another world.’”
“That sounds more like suicide to me.”
“That’s what historians have always assumed. After all, henbane is even more poisonous than opium. But the Druidic word for ‘consumed’ is almost the same as the word ‘burned’. And we know that the Druids used to burn henbane and breathe in the fumes to put them into a hallucinatory trance. In the Middle Ages, dentists used to burn henbane to dull their patients’ toothache. It’s very dangerous indeed. But it seems to have worked for Boudicca. It put her into a trance and she opened the six doors, so that she and the Druids and some of the Iceni could escape into the next reality.”
Josh said, “I have to tell you, this is a pretty hard story to swallow.”
“Why? You’ve been through a door yourself. The doors don’t obey any of the laws of space and time. They’re not a place, they’re a sustained state of mind, and for that state of mind to be perceptible, somebody somewhere has to be experiencing it.”
Josh put down his cup. “What about the Hooded Men? Where do they come into it?”
“They were the elite of the Puritan army which defeated the royalists. Over the centuries – in this particular London – they developed into something very much more than religious enforcers. They became what they are today. In your reality, I suppose you would describe them as a kind of Gestapo.”
“So what are you going to do now?”
“Somebody will have to find the person who is keeping the doors open, enter that building and make sure that the doors are closed for ever.”
“Like an assassin, you mean?”
“Exactly.”
“That’s all very well, but your assassin is going to be trapped in this reality for ever, isn’t he? Once the doors are closed, he can never come back.”
“This is our home, Josh. We aren’t going anywhere else.” He looked around at all of the young people sprawled on their chairs, and smiled. “This lot didn’t know anything about parallel worlds when I first arrived. They were all brought up on A Child’s Book of Simple Truth. But they knew that something was wrong with the world they lived in, even if they didn’t understand what. So I told them as much as I had discovered, and here we are. A sort of fledgling resistance movement, I suppose, although I didn’t mean to tell you that, not at the start.”
“And Winnie?” asked Nancy, in a voice as soft as a rubbed-out word.
John Farbelow shrugged. “Winifred Thomas. I never found out what happened to her. I pray that she didn’t meet the same fate as your sister, Josh; but I suspect very much that she might have done.” He was silent for a moment. His mouth puckered and his eyes filled with tears.
“Do you know something?” he said. “I don’t even have a picture of her. Not one. And I’m beginning to forget what she looked like.”
Fifteen
The next morning it was raining hard. They sat in a gloomy side room using a museum packing-case as a table, and shared a breakfast of Force wheat flakes and dry crackers spread with marmalade, and mugs of tea. Josh had never drunk so much tea in his life. It seemed as if every half an hour or so, somebody would put the kettle on. Having a cup of tea was their response to everything: shock, tiredness, elation, boredom, going to bed and waking up again.
John Farbelow came up to them dangling a set of car keys. “I’m going to let you borrow my Austin. Simon will drive you. You can go down to Lavender Hill and talk to your sister’s landlady. Then you can make some inquiries at Wheatstone’s. But be very careful when you go there. Frank Mordant’s as sharp as a tack.”
Simon took the car keys, tossed them up and caught them. “Not like you to trust me with anything, guvnor.”
“I’m trusting you because you owe these people your life. You take very good care of them, d’you hear, otherwise you’ll have me to answer to.”
Simon tried to look nonchalant, but it was obvious that he was frightened of John Farbelow. Josh had the feeling that John Farbelow might have caught Simon in some petty act of theft or betrayal, not so long ago, and that Simon considered himself lucky to have been let off lightly.
“Just remember,” John Farbelow warned him, as they prepared to leave the basement and go out into the rain, but from the look on his face Josh guessed that Simon didn’t need to be reminded of what he was supposed to remember.
They pushed their way out of the British Museum basement and climbed up the wet stone steps to the street. The rain was heavy and gusty, but every now and then it would ease off. The clouds rolled so quickly across the sky that one second the day was dark, corroded green, the next it sparkled as if diamonds had been strewn all over the sidewalks. A rainbow appeared in the sky over Broadcasting House – then another rainbow, a double. The air smelled fresh but the roar of traffic was already deafening, and the sidewalks of Great Russell Street were crowded with pedestrians – businessmen, office girls, porters, delivery boys, policemen and flower-sellers.
“John’s motor is parked round the back here,” said Simon, and led them into a narrow alley at the back of the Museum where six or seven automobiles were parked outside rows of peeling garage doors. He unlocked a large brown Austin and they climbed in. The brown leather seats were cracked with wear and the windows were so filmy that Josh could hardly see out. Simon tried to turn the engine over but it gave him nothing but a weary chug.
“Starting-handle!” he said, and rummaged under the driver’s seat for a long crooked metal rod. He went around to the front of the car, inserted the handle, and gave it two or three vigorous turns. The Austin’s engine coughed and blurted and a cloud of black smoke billowed out of the exhaust pipe. He climbed back in again, and engaged the gears with a deafening crunch.
They crept down St Martin’s Lane in solid traffic. As they waited, a delivery-boy on a bicycle leaned against the Austin’s roof, whistling. Simon wound down the window and said, “You! Nanty that leaning on my motor!”
“Oh, yeah, and ‘oo’s going to make me?”
Simon didn’t say a word, but abruptly opened his door, knocking the boy and his bicycle flat on the road, right in front of an oncoming bus. Fortunately the traffic on the opposite side of the road was going slowly, too. The bus ran over the bicycle’s front wheel and crushed its basket filled with eggs and groceries, but managed to slide to a stop just before it hit the boy’s head. The boy shrilled in terror, his eyes shut, his fists clenched. Simon slammed his door shut and carried on driving.
“What the hell did you do that for?” Nancy demanded. “He could have been killed!”
“Teach him not to lean on other people’s motors,” Simon replied. “You know what it says in A Child’s Book of Simple Truth. The property of others is God’s property, held in trust. Treat it as sacred.’”
“I’ve never had the pleasure of reading A Child’s Book of Simple Truth,” snapped Nancy. “Besides, it seems to me like you’re the last person w
ho should be giving lectures on the sacredness of other people’s property.”
“That’s different. I’m a revolutionary, like John Farbelow.”
“You’re a goddamn opportunist, more like.”
“That’s right. I’m a revolutionary goddam opportunist. What else do you want me to be, in a world like this?”
They reached a wide, open square, paved all over, with fountains and statues. The paving stones were shiny with rainwater and the wind blew the fountains into white mares’ tails. In the center of the square stood a tall stone column with a statue of a man on top of it, wearing a Puritan hat and knee-britches.
“Isn’t this … Trafalgar Square?” said Josh, dubiously. “It kind of looks like it, from all of those 1960s movies I used to watch.”
“Santa Cruz Square,” said Simon, as he steered his way around it, and headed down Whitehall. “That’s Robert Blake, standing on the top, pigeons and all.”
They drove down Whitehall toward Parliament Square. Josh had never been down Whitehall before, so he didn’t realize that the Cenotaph, the British war memorial, was simply not there; and that there were no security gates across the entrance to Downing Street.
The Houses of Parliament looked the same to Josh as they had in “real” London, except that there were noticeably different trees in Parliament Square, and no statue to Winston Churchill. They crossed the Thames again, but Josh didn’t look at it, and Nancy, grasping his hand, knew why.
The Austin whinnied its way southwards along the Fairfax Embankment. The rain grew heavier and drummed on the roof like the drummers who preceded the Hooded Men. The windshield wipers could barely cope with the downpour, and Simon kept smearing the glass in front of him with his sleeve, so that he could see where he was going.
At last they reached Lavender Hill. In this parallel London it looked just as dreary as it had in “real” London, except that there were no Indian takeaways and no used-car lots. Simon had a map penciled on the back of a brown envelope, and he steered them slowly toward Kaiser Gardens. It was a short, sloping street, with scabrous plane trees on either side. The houses were small and cramped, with cheap nets hanging at their windows, and front gardens crowded with irrationally cheerful gnomes. They crept along the curb until they found 53b, and then Simon pulled on the handbrake.
They climbed out of the car and pushed open the gate to 53b. Up and down the street Josh could see nets being drawn back and pale anxious faces looking out. Nancy said, “You couldn’t even drop a gum wrapper around here without everybody knowing about it.”
Number 53b was a pebble-dashed semi. Its bright green door had an oval stained-glass window in it, depicting a galleon under full sail. The tiny front garden had been laid with crazy paving, but there were no gnomes here, only a diminutive wishing-well cluttered with wind-blown candy wrappers.
Simon went up to the door and pressed the button. He waited for a while, then he pressed it again. “Nobody home. Either that, or the alex doesn’t work.”
“Try knocking,” Josh suggested. Simon rapped on the stained-glass window with his knuckles, and listened some more. As he did so, however, they heard a grinding, droning noise in the distance somewhere.
“Do you hear that?” asked Nancy, frowning.
The droning grew louder. Within less than a minute, it was so deafening that they could hardly hear themselves speak. The windows in number 53b began to rattle and a dog started barking in the garden next door. “Simon – what the hell is that?” shouted Josh.
Simon prodded a finger up toward the sky. “The ten o’clock from New York, that’s what. It’s coming in low because of the weather.”
At that moment, an immense gray shape appeared over the rooftops, no more than two hundred feet above their heads. It was ten times the size of a whale, although it was almost the same shape. It had eight propeller engines suspended underneath it, which accounted for the grinding noise, and a large pale cigar-shaped gondola, with windows all the way along.
It seemed to take an age to pass over their heads, and all the time the dog kept on barking and the windows continued to rattle. Josh watched it with his hand cupped over his eyes to keep out the rain. He felt an unexpected sense of dread, as if he were watching aliens landing in The War of the Worlds. At last it turned north-eastward, over the Thames, and gradually disappeared behind the clouds.
“Wouldn’t get me up in one of those,” said Simon, giving another sharp knock at the door. “Full of toffs and hydrogen.”
There was still no answer. The rain made a prickling noise in the nettles.
“Maybe she’s out,” Josh suggested. “Looks like we’ll have to come back later.”
Simon lifted the letterbox flap, and peered inside. “I don’t know … I think I can hear a television. She wouldn’t go out and leave a television on. Besides, there’s nothing on at this time of the morning. Only the test card.”
He tried the door, but it was locked. Josh said, “Let’s take a look around the back. Maybe she simply can’t hear us.”
Simon went up to the side gate, reached over the top and pulled back the bolt. They walked along the narrow path at the side of the house, negotiating three overflowing trash cans, until they found themselves in a small sloping backyard, with a scrubby patch of wet green grass and a lineful of washing hanging up to dry – frayed towels, socks, and a brassiere.
“What woman leaves her washing out in the pouring rain?” said Nancy.
Simon went up to the back door and rapped his ring-covered fingers on the frosted glass. “Mrs Marmion! You in there, Mrs Marmion?” He rapped again and this time the door swung open. He ran his fingers down the left-hand side of the frame. “Somebody’s had a jemmy to this.”
Josh came up behind him and opened the door a little wider. Inside he could see a small scullery with a floor covered with green and cream linoleum. There was a heavy china sink with a single cold faucet dripping into it, and a knocked-over bucket with a mop. In the background, he could hear the high-pitched whining of a television set.
“Hallo?” he called. “Mrs Marmion? Are you there? It’s Josh Winward, I called you yesterday!”
Still there was no reply. Simon said, “Something’s wrong here, guvnor. Let’s hop the Charley before we get caught.”
“Let me take a quick look inside,” said Josh. “It’ll only take a minute.”
“Entering somebody’s house, that’s chancing it.”
“I have to see Julia’s room. Mrs Marmion tried to tell me over the phone that somebody had been here to take all of her things away. But you never know. She might have left some kind of clue behind. A note. A letter. She always kept a diary, too.”
He stepped into the scullery. It smelled like old damp floorcloths and it was crowded with buckets and brooms and shelves full of firelighters and Brasso and tins of shoe polish. There was a coal-burning boiler at one side of the room, but when he laid his hand on it, it was stone cold. Josh hesitated for a moment and then he made his way through to the kitchen. This wasn’t much larger than the scullery, with a view of the side wall of the house next door, a small enamel-topped table, and a cream-painted hutch stacked with yellow tins of Colman’s mustard and brown jars of Marmite and boxes of Shredded Wheat.
Simon said, “We really should get out of here, guvnor. Half the street knows we’re in here, and it only takes one old busybody to call the Old Bill.”
“I’ll be quick, I promise you,” said Josh. He opened the kitchen door and found himself in a narrow corridor that led to the front door. Beside the door was a mahogany hat-stand with a mirror in it. Josh caught sight of his own face: the stained-glass galleon cast a green-and-yellowish pattern across his cheeks, so that he looked as if he were dead and decayed.
He opened a door leading to the right. There was a small living room with a dull brown carpet. It was here that the television was still switched on: a black-and-white set showing a test card from the BBC. Josh went into the room and switched it off. Nancy came in cl
ose behind him and looked around. She picked up some framed black-and-white photographs from the mantelpiece: one of them showed a group of people at the seaside, paddling in the water in long one-piece bathing costumes. Another one showed a white-haired old lady sitting in a sunny room somewhere, with a cat nestling in her lap.
“Josh,” said Nancy, and passed him the picture.
Josh angled it so that the gloomy light from the window fell across it. “It couldn’t be, could it? But it looks so much like her.”
“I’m sure it’s her. Look at the way she’s sitting. And that smile.”
“But what’s her picture doing here?”
Nancy took the picture frame, turned it over, and unfastened the clip at the back. She took out the photograph and held it up. “Mother. Iverna Court. 16/08/99.”
“So the old lady in the hospital was Mrs Marmion’s mother. That’s deeply weird.”
Simon was growing agitated. He kept peeping out through the net curtains into the street to make sure that the police or the Hooded Men hadn’t showed up. “I dodged them once. I don’t think they’ll let me dodge them again.”
Josh clapped him on the shoulder. “Don’t lose your nerve, kid. Be calm. Think about something soothing, like the sea.”
“The sea makes me sick.”
Josh slipped the photograph of Mrs Marmion’s mother into his coat pocket. Then he went back out to the hallway and climbed the steep flight of stairs that led up to the first-floor landing. There was a bedroom immediately on his right and another on his left. Ahead of him was a door with a ceramic plaque on it marked Bathroom.
He went into the right-hand bedroom. It was wallpapered with pale pink flowers, and there was a cheap oak-veneered double bed with a pink satin quilt on it. Behind the door stood a 1950s-style wardrobe and under the window stood a chest of drawers with a crochet cloth on top of it. An electric alarm clock chirruped loudly on the nightstand.
The Doorkeepers Page 17