This seemed to catch Reg quite by surprise.
“He asked you,” continued Dirk, consulting a small notebook he had pulled from his pocket, “if there was any particular reason why one thing happened after another and if there was any way of stopping it. Did he not also ask you, and ask you first, if it was possible to move backwards in time, or something of that kind?”
Reg gave Dirk a long and appraising look.
“I was right about you,” he said, “you have a very remarkable mind, young man.” He walked slowly over to the window that looked out on to Second Court. He watched the odd figures scuttling through it hugging themselves in the drizzle or pointing at things.
“Yes,” said Reg at last in a subdued voice, “that is precisely what he said.”
“Good,” said Dirk, snapping shut his notebook with a tight little smile which said that he lived for such praise, “then that explains why the answers were yes, no and maybe — in that order. Now. Where is it?”
“Where is what?”
“The time machine.”
“You're standing in it.” said Reg.
CHAPTER 26
A party of noisy people spilled into the train at Bishop's Stortford. Some were wearing morning suits with carnations looking a little battered by a day's festivity. The women of the party were in smart dresses and hats, chattering excitedly about how pretty Julia had looked in all that silk taffeta, how Ralph still looked like a smug oaf even done up in all his finery, and generally giving the whole thing about two weeks.
One of the men stuck his head out of the window and hailed a passing railway employee just to check that this was the right train and was stopping at Cambridge. The porter confirmed that of course it bloody was. The young man said that they didn't all want to find they were going off in the wrong direction, did they, and made a sound a little like that of a fish barking, as if to indicate that this was a pricelessly funny remark, and then pulled his head back in, banging it on the way.
The alcohol content of the atmosphere in the carriage rose sharply.
There seemed to be a general feeling in the air that the best way of getting themselves in the right mood for the post-wedding reception party that evening was to make a foray to the bar so that any members of the party who were not already completely drunk could finish the task. Rowdy shouts of acclamation greeted this notion, the train restarted with a jolt and a lot of those still standing fell over.
Three young men dropped into the three empty seats round one table, of which the fourth was already taken by a sleekly overweight man in an old-fashioned suit. He had a lugubrious face and his large, wet, cowlike eyes gazed into some unknown distance.
Very slowly his eyes began to refocus all the way from infinity and gradually to home in on his more immediate surroundings, his new and intrusive companions. There was a need he felt, as he had felt before.
The three men were discussing loudly whether they would all go to the bar, whether some of them would go to the bar and bring back drinks for the others, whether the ones who went to the bar would get so excited by all the drinks there that they would stay put and forget to bring any back for the others who would be sitting here anxiously awaiting their return, and whether even if they did remember to come back immediately with the drinks they would actually be capable of carrying them and wouldn't simply throw them all over the carriage on the way back, incommoding other passengers.
Some sort of consensus seemed to be reached, but almost immediately none of them could remember what it was. Two of them got up, then sat down again as the third one got up. Then he sat down.
The two other ones stood up again, expressing the idea that it might be simpler if they just bought the entire bar.
The third was about to get up again and follow them, when slowly, but with unstoppable purpose, the cow-eyed man sitting opposite him leant across, and gripped him firmly by the forearm.
The young man in his morning suit looked up as sharply as his somewhat bubbly brain would allow and, startled, said, “What do you want?”
Michael Wenton-Weakes gazed into his eyes with terrible intensity, and said, in a low voice, “I was on a ship…”
“What?”
“A ship…” said Michael.
“What ship, what are you talking about? Get off me. Let go!”
“We came,” continued Michael, in a quiet, almost inaudible, but compelling voice, “a monstrous distance. We came to build a paradise. A paradise. Here.”
His eyes swam briefly round the carriage, and then gazed briefly out through the spattered windows at the gathering gloom of a drizzly East Anglian evening. He gazed with evident loathing. His grip on the other's forearm tightened.
“Look, I'm going for a drink,” said the wedding guest, though feebly, because he clearly wasn't.
“We left behind those who would destroy themselves with war,” murmured Michael. “Ours was to be a world of peace, of music, of art, of enlightenment. All that was petty, all that was mundane, all that was contemptible would have no place in our world…”
The stilled reveller looked at Michael wonderingly. He didn't look like an old hippy. Of course, you never could tell. His own elder brother had once spent a couple of years living in a Druidic commune, eating LSD doughnuts and thinking he was a tree, since when he had gone on to become a director of a merchant bank. The difference, of course, was that he hardly ever still thought he was a tree, except just occasionally, and he had long ago learnt to avoid the particular claret which sometimes triggered off that flashback.
“There were those who said we would fail,” continued Michael in his low tone that carried clearly under the boisterous noise that filled the carriage, “who prophesied that we too carried in us the seed of war, but it was our high resolve and purpose that only art and beauty should flourish, the highest art, the highest beauty — music. We took with us only those who believed, who wished it to be true.”
“But what are you talking about?” asked the wedding guest though not challengingly, for he had fallen under Michael's mesmeric spell. “When was this? Where was this?”
Michael breathed hard. “Before you were born —” he said at last, “be still, and I will tell you.”
CHAPTER 27
There was a long startled silence during which the evening gloom outside seemed to darken appreciably and gather the room into its grip. A trick of the light wreathed Reg in shadows.
Dirk was, for one of the few times in a life of exuberantly prolific loquacity, wordless. His eyes shone with a child's wonder as they passed anew over the dull and shabby furniture of the room, the panelled walls, the threadbare carpets. His hands were trembling.
Richard frowned faintly to himself for a moment as if he was trying to work out the square root of something in his head, and then looked back directly at Reg.
“Who are you?” he asked.
“I have absolutely no idea,” said Reg brightly, “much of my memory's gone completely. I am very old, you see. Startlingly old. Yes, I think if I were to tell you how old I was it would be fair to say that you would be startled. Odds are that so would I, because I can't remember. I've seen an awful lot, you know. Forgotten most of it, thank God. Trouble is, when you start getting to my age, which, as I think I mentioned earlier, is a somewhat startling one — did I say that?”
“Yes, you did mention it.”
“Good. I'd forgotten whether I had or not. The thing is that your memory doesn't actually get any bigger, and a lot of stuff just falls out. So you see, the major difference between someone of my age and someone of yours is not how much I know, but how much I've forgotten. And after a while you even forget what it is you've forgotten, and after that you even forget that there was something to remember. Then you tend to forget, er, what it was you were talking about.”
He stared helplessly at the teapot.
“Things you remember…” prompted Richard gently.
“Smells and earrings.”
“I beg you
r pardon?”
“Those are things that linger for some reason,” said Reg, shaking his head in a puzzled way. He sat down suddenly. “The earrings that Queen Victoria wore on her Silver Jubilee. Quite startling objects. Toned down in the pictures of the period, of course. The smell of the streets before there were cars in them. Hard to say which was worse. That's why Cleopatra remains so vividly in the memory, of course. A quite devastating combination of earrings and smell. I think that will probably be the last thing that remains when all else has finally fled. I shall sit alone in a darkened room, sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything but a little grey old head, and in that little grey old head a peculiar vision of hideous blue and gold dangling things flashing in the light, and the smell of sweat, catfood and death. I wonder what I shall make of it…”
Dirk was scarcely breathing as he began to move slowly round the room, gently brushing his fingertips over the walls, the sofa, the table.
“How long,” he said, “has this been —”
“Here?” said Reg. “Just about two hundred years. Ever since I retired.”
“Retired from what?”
“Search me. Must have been something pretty good, though, what do you think?”
“You mean you've been in this same set of rooms here for… two hundred years?” murmured Richard. “You'd think someone would notice, or think it was odd.”
“Oh, that's one of the delights of the older Cambridge colleges,” said Reg, “everyone is so discreet. If we all went around mentioning what was odd about each other we'd be here till Christmas. Svlad, er — Dirk, my dear fellow, please don't touch that just at the moment.”
Dirk's hand was reaching out to touch the abacus standing on its own on the only clear spot on the big table.
“What is it?” said Dirk sharply.
“It's just what it looks like, an old wooden abacus,” said Reg. “I'll show you in a moment, but first I must congratulate you on your powers of perception. May I ask how you arrived at the solution?”
“I have to admit,” said Dirk with rare humility, “that I did not. In the end I asked a child. I told him the story of the trick and asked him how he thought it had been done, and he said and I quote, ‘It's bleedin' obvious, innit, he must've 'ad a bleedin' time machine.’ I thanked the little fellow and gave him a shilling for his trouble. He kicked me rather sharply on the shin and went about his business. But he was the one who solved it. My only contribution to the matter was to see that he /must/ be right. He had even saved me the bother of kicking myself.”
“But you had the perception to think of asking a child,” said Reg. “Well then, I congratulate you on that instead.”
Dirk was still eyeing the abacus suspiciously.
“How… does it work?” he said, trying to make it sound like a casual enquiry.
“Well, it's really terribly simple,” said Reg, “it works any way you want it to. You see, the computer that runs it is a rather advanced one. In fact it is more powerful than the sum total of all the computers on this planet including — and this is the tricky part —including itself. Never really understood that bit myself, to be honest with you. But over ninety-five per cent of that power is used in simply understanding what it is you want it to do. I simply plonk my abacus down there and it understands the way I use it. I think I must have been brought up to use an abacus when I was a… well, a child, I suppose.
“Richard, for instance, would probably want to use his own personal computer. If you put it down there, where the abacus is the machine's computer would simple take charge of it and offer you lots of nice user-friendly time-travel applications complete with pull-down menus and desk accessories if you like. Except that you point to 1066 on the screen and you've got the Battle of Hastings going on outside your door, er, if that's the sort of thing you're interested in.”
Reg's tone of voice suggested that his own interests lay in other areas.
“It's, er, really quite fun in its way,” he concluded. “Certainly better than television and a great deal easier to use than a video recorder. If I miss a programme I just pop back in time and watch it. I'm hopeless fiddling with all those buttons.”
Dirk reacted to this revelation with horror.
“You have a time machine and you use it for… watching television?”
“Well, I wouldn't use it at all if I could get the hang of the video recorder. It's a very delicate business, time travel, you know. Full of appalling traps and dangers, if you should change the wrong thing in the past, you could entirely disrupt the course of history.
“Plus, of course, it mucks up the telephone. I'm sorry,” he said to Richard a little sheepishly, “that you were unable to phone your young lady last night. There seems to be something fundamentally inexplicable about the British telephone system, and my time machine doesn't like it. There's never any problem with the plumbing, the electricity, or even the gas. The connection interfaces are taken care of at some quantum level I don't entirely understand, and it's never been a problem.
“The phone on the other hand is definitely a problem. Every time I use the time machine, which is, of course, hardly at all, partly because of this very problem with the phone, the phone goes haywire and I have to get some lout from the phone company to come and fix it, and he starts asking stupid questions the answers to which he has no hope of understanding. Anyway, the point is that I have a very strict rule that I must not change anything in the past at all —” Reg sighed — “whatever the temptation.”
“What temptation?” said Dirk, sharply.
“Oh, it's just a little, er, thing I'm interested in,” said Reg, vaguely, “it is perfectly harmless because I stick very strictly to the rule. It makes me sad, though.”
“But you broke your own rule!” insisted Dirk. “Last night! You changed something in the past —”
“Well, yes,” said Reg, a little uncomfortably, “but that was different. Very different. If you had seen the look on the poor child's face. So miserable. She thought the world should be a marvellous place, and all those appalling old dons were pouring their withering scorn on her just because it wasn't marvellous for them anymore. I mean,” he added, appealing to Richard, “remember Cawley. What a bloodless old goat. Someone should get some humanity into him even if they have to knock it in with a brick. No, that was perfectly justifiable. Otherwise, I make it a very strict rule —”
Richard looked at him with dawning recognition of something.
“Reg,” he said politely, “may I give you a little advice?”
“Of course you may, my dear fellow, I should adore you to,” said Reg.
“If our mutual friend here offers to take you for a stroll along the banks of the River Cam, don't go.”
“What on earth do you mean?”
“He means,” said Dirk earnestly, “that he thinks there may be something a little disproportionate between what you actually did, and your stated reasons for doing it.”
“Oh. Well, odd way of saying it —”
“Well, he's a very odd fellow. But you see, there sometimes may be other reasons for things you do which you are not necessarily aware of. As in the case of post-hypnotic suggestion — or possession.”
Reg turned very pale.
“Possession —” he said.
“Professor — Reg — I believe there was some reason you wanted to see me. What exactly was it?”
“Cambridge! this is… Cambridge!” came the lilting squawk of the station public address system.
Crowds of noisy revellers spewed out on to the platform barking and honking at each other.
“Where's Rodney?” said one, who had clambered with difficulty from the carriage in which the bar was situated. He and his companion looked up and down the platform, totteringly. The large figure of Michael Wenton-Weakes loomed silently past them and out to the exit.
They jostled their way down the side of the train, looking in through the dirty carriage windows. They suddenly saw their missing com
panion still sitting, trance-like, in his seat in the now almost empty compartment. They banged on the window and hooted at him. For a moment or two he didn't react, and when he did he woke suddenly in a puzzled way as if seeming not to know where he was.
“He's pie-eyed!” his companions bawled happily, bundling themselves on to the train again and bundling Rodney back off.
He stood woozily on the platform and shook his head. Then glancing up he saw through the railings the large bulk of Michael Wenton-Weakes heaving himself and a large heavy bag into a taxi-cab, and he stood for a moment transfixed.
“'Straordinary thing,” he said, “that man. Telling me a long story about some kind of shipwreck.”
“Har har,” gurgled one of his two companions, “get any money off you?”
“What?” said Rodney, puzzled. “No. No, I don't think so. Except it wasn't a shipwreck, more an accident, an explosion —? He seems to think he caused it in some way. Or rather there was an accident, and he caused an explosion trying to put it right and killed everybody. Then he said there was an awful lot of rotting mud for years and years, and then slimy things with legs. It was all a bit peculiar.”
“Trust Rodney! Trust Rodney to pick a madman!”
“I think he must have been mad. He suddenly went off on a tangent about some bird. He said the bit about the bird was all nonsense. He wished he could get rid of the bit about the bird. But then he said it would be put right. It would all be put right. For some reason I didn't like it when he said that.”
“Should have come along to the bar with us. Terribly funny, we —”
“I also didn't like the way he said goodbye. I didn't like that at all.”
CHAPTER 28
“You remember,” said Reg, “when you arrived this afternoon I said that times recently had been dull, but for… interesting reasons?”
“I remember it vividly,” said Dirk, “it happened a mere ten minutes ago. You were standing exactly there as I recall. Indeed you were wearing the very clothes with which you are currently apparelled, and —”
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency Page 20