`Your Honour.' Carpet Slippers rose to his feet and frowned. `I am of the Cigar Store nation. My nation do not tell lies. The scumbag is as guilty as a wigwamful of rapists.'
`Hey!'
The entire court turned and gave Sitting Bull an unpleasant stare. He sat down again.
`The sentence of this court,' said Five Ovenproof Dishes, breathing heavily, `is that you be expelled from your nation until the wind ceases to blow and the eagle lies down with the wolf. I have spoken.'
'Ah come on,' shouted Sitting Bull incredulously. `This whole thing is getting hopelessly jejune. I demand to know by what right...'
Counsel for the Defence nutted him with an obsidian club and he resumed his seat. The judge scowled.
`For calling the court jejune,' he growled, `the mandatory penalty is burial upright in an anthill. Perhaps you would care to rephrase ...?'
`Okay, not jejune.' Sitting Bull looked around, selected a big, thick legal tome (Giggles Incessantly on Criminal Procedure), held it over his head umbrella-fashion and rose to a wary crouch. `Forget jejune, sorry. But really, you guys are making one big mistake here. I'm a medium, goddammit, people ask me questions, I tell'em. It's my job. I had no choice, okay?'
There was a pause. Counsel for both parties approached the bench, and whispering ensued.
`Prisoner states that he is a medium,' intoned the judge. `Correct?'
Sitting Bull nodded.
`Fine. Call Marshall Macluhan.'
Witness testified that, in his expert opinion, the medium was the message. The message found to be inherently unlawful. Appeal disallowed. All stand.
Twenty minutes later, Sitting Bull's suitcases were put outside the front entrance, followed shortly and at great speed by their owner. After a pause, Sitting Bull got up, dusted himself off, shooed various members of the spectral buffalo herd away from his suit covers and slouched off into the Upper Air.
As he slouched, he considered.
It was fortunate, he said to himself, that he was a fully westernised, regenerate member of the indigenous American community, free from the absurd superstitions of his ancestors; because otherwise, he'd be firmly convinced that being slung out of the Hunting Grounds would inevitably result in
his being chased six times round the Sun by the Great Wolf Spirit, bitten in half and eaten. `Absolutely just as well,' he muttered aloud. `Crazy bunch of goddamn savages...'
He hesitated. He could feel hot breath on the back of his neck, soft fur rubbing his ankles, a nose as cold as Death nuzzling his ear.
`Woof.'
He turned round. Behind him, two piercing red eyes, a pair of gnarled ears laid back against a long, thin, cruel skull, jaws like scrap car compressors holding between them a yellow and blue rubber ball.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
SLOWLY, with infinite pains and an almost superhuman patience, Kurt Lundqvist made his way across the main room - sorry, we must now call it the drawing-room - of the hideout, towards the corner with the loose floorboard.
They train you for this sort of thing at Ninja School, of course; crossing a dark and unfamiliar room full of hideously lethal booby-traps without waking the guards. The orthodox technique is to use the scabbard of your sword as a sort of blind man's white stick. Untold generations of Japanese silent killers have succeeded with it; or if they failed, they never came to report back. And anyway, the Japanese are a conservative people.
Lundqvist believed in progress and he had no scabbard, so he used the snapped-off aerial of the clock radio he'd received as a free gift for spending more than A$15,000 on soft furnishings with a leading Melbourne furniture warehouse. It was tricky going, and his hand was starting to shake.
Goddamnit, the place was an absolute fucking minefield.
Because when you buy furniture, you buy surfaces, and every major league homemaker worth her velour crowds each surface with enough breakable ornaments to fill a ceramics museum. One false move and the air would be full of needle
sharp porcelain splinters, higher velocity and more deadly than the latest generation of anti-personnel fragmentation mines (and, of course, unlocatable with a metal detector).
Ting. The tip of the aerial tapped against something cold, hard and musical. Probably the big blue pot-pourri bowl. Lundqvist froze, then reached forward with the aerial, glacierslow and gentle as the softest breeze. Ting. Yes. Right. At least he knew where the bugger was. He'd been worrying about that ever since he'd millimetred his way round the standard lamp.
Thunk. The sound of metal on walnut. Bookshelves. The end wall. He flicked gingerly and tapped against the spines of big, glossy coffee-table books (Modern Interior Design, This House A Home, Three Thousand Lounges In Full Colour and other similar titles). He was nearly there, and nothing dislodged or smashed. Ninjas; fuck Ninjas. By this time, even the best of those black-pyjamad loons would have fallen over the footstool and be picking Wedgewood shrapnel out of his windpipe.
Delicate probing with the aerial and the fingertips located the corner of the wall, which meant that the rest would be sheer dead reckoning. The loose floorboard, under which he'd stashed the shortband radio and the spare Glock about thirty seconds before the carpet squad had turned the place into a deep-pile killing zone, was at the point of a right angle seventy centimetres out from the corner.
Lundqvist opened his big Gerber TAC II lockknife, paused and listened. He had no reason to believe that Helen wasn't still sleeping soundly, but in this game you don't last long if you confine yourself to mere existential evidence. You have to reach out and feel for the mind of the assailant, the guard, the sentry; you have to taste sleep in the air. He recognised it - the less-than-absolute stillness which means that the other person in this house isn't standing motionless behind you with a whacking great knife - and started to cut the carpet.
The Gerber is state of the art, the nearest thing to Luke
Skywalker's lightsaber ever made, but there are some materials that even Death's scythe snags on, and really expensive carpeting is one of them. As he sawed, Lundqvist could feel the exquisitely honed edge of the blade being wiped away, like spilt coffee on Formica.
His hand found the floorboard, tilted it, and burrowed, until the tip of his index finger made contact with cold, smooth plastic. Gently, quietly, he drew the package out, slit it open, and felt the radio.
`Links,' he hissed. `Links, can you hear me? For Chrissakes, Links, this is no time for goddamn screwing around - oh, God, sorry Mrs Jotapian, is Links there, please? Links. Your son. Yes, sorry, Jerome. Thank you.'
`Hi,' crackled a voice, sounding like a PA system in an echo chamber in the quiet of the drawing-room. `Links Jotapian here, who's this?'
`It's Lundqvist, you bastard, and keep your voice down.'
Lucky George isn't the only one who has friends, you see. Admittedly, since Crazy Mean Bernard was dragged out of a blazing chopper somewhere in Nicaragua and vanished from the face of the earth Lundqvist only has one friend, who happens to be sixteen years old and short-sighted, but it evens the score a little bit. Like, say, a single hair cast on to the balance.
'Hiya, Mr Lundqvist,' Links yelled happily. `How ya doing? You on a job right now?'
`Yes.' Lundqvist closed his eyes and tried to find a little scrap of patience he'd overlooked previously, clinging with limpetlike tenacity to the bottom of the jar. `That's right, Links. That's why I want you to keep your stinking voice down, okay?'
`Sure thing, Mr Lundqvist. Can you tell me about it, or is it a secret?'
Not for the first time, Lundqvist found himself asking why in God's name he'd allowed himself to take on a skinny,
mush-brained adolescent as an apprentice. The answer was the same as always. Teenage males being, fundamentally, weirder than a lorryload of stoned ghosts, sooner or later you'll find one who's prepared to hero-worship anybody, even Kurt Lundqvist. In Jerome Jotapian, five foot eleven of virtually unfleshed bone and hideously bezitted complexion from Pittsburgh, Lundqvist had found his Ro
bin the Boy-Wonder. And in this life, you've got to do the best with what you can get, so when a middle-aged hit-man gets a fan letter from out of the blue (Dear Mr Lundqvist, you don't know me, I'm sixteen years old and live in Pittsburgh Pa, I really admired your last assassination and can you help me get into this line of work, I expect to get satisfactory grades in Math and English Literature and I have my own throwing knife) he finds it hard to resist writing back.
`I finished the correspondence course stuff you sent me, by the way,' burbled Links. `It was good. You want me to read you a bit of it now? How about the question about what plastic explosive you'd use to blow up a Roman Catholic cardinal in a small Latin American republic? I thought a lot about that, Mr Lundqvist, and finally I figured Semtex, because -'
`Not now, Links.'
`Okay, boss. Actually, Semtex isn't the answer I finally said, but you'll see when you read what -'
`Links.' Lundqvist drew a deep breath. `I need your help.' `Hot damn, Mr Lundqvist! Really? You mean really help, in a job?'
`Yes.' Lundqvist's face was twisted into a hideous mask of self-contempt. `Yes, Links, and it's very important. I'm in a bit of a jam and I need you to get me out. Look, I want you to hijack me an airliner...'
`Wow!' The boy's whoop of joy seemed to fill the room and large parts of the surrounding outback. `Hey, I know how to do that, it's the part you sent me the week before last, only I think
that's in with the stuff Mom made me put down in the basement last week. You want to hold while I go see if I can find it?'
`No, Links, just stay where you are and keep your mouth shut for a minute.' Lundqvist stopped and herded his straggling thoughts. Talking to the boy for more than fifteen minutes was like trying to gather up a ream of A4 paper in a Force 9 gale. `You get the plane, right? Nothing fancy, just something with enough legs to get to Australia and back. You take the thing to Australia, which is where I am now, you dump it out in the desert somewhere, you get a chopper, you come in, you get me out of here, we split. Now, do you think you can manage that?'
There was a short pause. `I figure so, Mr Lundqvist. You'd better tell me where you are.'
Lundqvist told him.
`That's a long way away, Mr Lundqvist, do you think we can do this so that I'll still be back by half-eleven? Mom doesn't like me being out after half-eleven, you see, and -'
`You leave Mom to me,' Lundqvist interrupted, `you just get the plane and hurry. Before that crazy bitch spends every last cent I own.'
`I beg your pardon, Mr Lundqvist?'
Just do it, okay?'
A glider careened through the night air like a giant owl. The side door slid open, and three parachutes blossomed like inbred magnolias, drifted through the blackness and slowly folded on to the ground.
`We're here then, are we?' enquired the first spectral warrior. He was wearing a Hawaiian shirt and brightly coloured knee-length shorts and carrying a suitcase.
The Captain nodded and pulled the brim of his huge straw hat down over his eyes. `Oh yes,' he muttered. `We're here all right.'
`Great,' said the first spectral warrior. `Can you let us in on the surprise yet? I mean, yes I know it's a surprise works outing, to make it up to us for having to go after Lundqvist and all that, but. ..'
The other spectral warrior looked around him and felt the desert sand between his toes. He sighed happily.
`Who careth?' he observed. Jutht tho long ath we're at the theathide, it doethn't really matter where, doeth it?'
`Exactly,' said the Captain. `Right, we'd better be making a move before it starts getting light.'
Number Two looked at him. `Getting light?' he said.
`Spoil the surprise,' said the Captain quickly. `Now then, the, um, hotel is this way. Follow me, and, er, keep the noise down.'
'Tho ath not to wake the other guethtth, you mean?' `Something like that.'
In the darkness some way in front of them they could just make out the outline of a long, low building, something like a cross between a garage and a cowshed, only bigger.
'Thith ith the hotel?'
`Yes, and keep your voice down, will you? They're very fussy about -'
`Here, skip.'
`Yes?'
`Look at all these empty packing cases. Like the sort of thing furniture comes in.' An unpleasant thought crossed Number Two's mind. `Hey, skip, you're sure this hotel's actually finished? I mean, you hear stories, people turning up, hotel's still being built...'
The Captain made a noise in the back of his throat.
`It's not exactly a hotel, chaps,' he observed in a small voice. `It's not, um, quite that sort of holiday.'
`It's not?'
`No.,
'How d'you mean, thkip?'
`It's more . . .' The Captain paused, choosing his words with
care. `More a sort of, well, adventure holiday really.' As he spoke he unbuttoned his jacket, drew out a .44 Super Redhawk and, from sheer force of habit, spun the cylinder.
'Cor,' said Number Two. `It's one of those paintball things, isn't it? Where you run about with paint guns pretending to shoot people. I always wanted to try one of them.'
The Captain breathed out through his nose. `Great stuff, Keith,' he said. 'Now's your chance.'
'Doethn't look like a paint gun to me, thkip.'
`That's all you know.'
'Yeth, but thkip, thothe paint gunth, they're much bigger and bulkier than real gunth, and that lookth like a real gun to me, don't you think...'
`Yeah, well.' The Captain grinned nervously. `We want to win, don't we?'
`Okay, skip, if you put it that way...'
`I do. Vern, break the window, I'll cover you.'
`What with, thkip?'
`What do you mean, what with?'
`I'th got a blanket in my luggage, thkip, if you want to uthe that. To thtop the glath from the window. That ith what you meant, ithn't it?'
`Shut up.'
Links Jotapian had one quality that made him stand out from the crowd. Well, two; but there was still a reasonable chance that he'd grow out of one of them. The other, the useful one, was a quite disproportionate quantity of beginner's luck.
The first time he did anything, he did it well. The next time, maybe not so hot, maybe even a complete and utter disaster; but the first time, no problem.
Fortunately for all involved, this was the first time he'd ever flown a helicopter.
`Depress joystick,' he read aloud, mumbling slightly because of the torch gripped between his teeth, `while simultaneously engaging left rudder flap.' He stared hard at the control panel for a moment - why didn't they write the names of the various controls on the panel, you'd think they'd do that, there were so many little knobs and levers. He sighed, and leafed back through the instruction manual to the diagram at the end.
`Okay,' he said aloud. `The third from the left, just down from the cigarette lighter.' He tried it. It worked. The helicopter stopped in mid-air and hung there.
He turned to the index.
Lamps, Fog, adjustment of 17
Lamps, Head, adjustment of 18
replacement of bulbs 36
Landing, procedure 47
Holding the stick steady with one hand, he leafed through the manual with the other. 43, 44, 45, 46 ...
Page 47 was missing. Or at least, it was there, in part; but there had been a coupon ('Why not enter our grand spot-therotor-blade competition and win the holiday of a lifetime?') on page 48 which some previous reader had clipped out and sent off. All that was left of the paragraph on landing procedure was the headline.
`Nuts,' said Links, annoyed.
He'd just have to work it out from first principles.
Lundqvist froze, one leg over the window-sill, and put his hand in front of his eyes.
`That you, Links?' he shouted, but his voice was drowned by the roar of the whirring blades and the rush of the downdraught. Blinking furiously in the glare of the chopper's landing lights, he threw out his rucksack and prepared
to follow it.
`Freeze!'
He turned towards the voice, and saw a dark shape
silhouetted against the glare of the lights. The barrel of a large calibre revolver flashed as it swung up on target.
`Hey, thkip. Thkip!'
`I said be quiet. Okay, nice and steady...'
`But thkip, it'th him. Lundqvitht. Let'th get out of here, thkip, the bathtard'th obviouthly following uth.'
`Look, for the last time, will you shut up? You, Lundqvist, nice and easy, throw down your -'
`Hey, skip.' Lundqvist could hear the anger in the voice above the scream of the blades. `You knew, didn't you? You bleeding well set us up!'
`Yes, fine, later. Just now I'm busy, okay? Throw down your weapons, nice and .. .
The helicopter landed.
There's beginner's luck and beginner's luck. In this case, it consisted of Links being very, very lucky indeed to be thrown clear of the chopper before it hit the deck and blew up.
A quick status check told Lundqvist that he was being hurled violently through the air by a shock-wave of hot air. That was all right by him; he'd been there before, he knew exactly how to roll with it when he landed. The good part about it was, once he landed he'd be back on even terms. And being on even terms was, in his experience, a very unfair advantage in his favour.
By contrast, the Captain of Spectral Warriors came round from a moment of temporary unconsciousness to find himself sprawled full length, still holding the revolver, on a green satin Chesterfield. Further investigation revealed a large patch of corrugated iron between him and the cushions of the sofa, the result of his having entered the house via the roof.
`Will you get off that sofa immediately,' said a cold, hard voice behind him. `Look, you're getting blood all over it. Have you any idea how hard it is getting blood off satin?'
The second spectral warrior, for his part, came to rest halfway through a solid pine door; his head on one side, the rest of him on the other. He wriggled, tried to free himself. `Oh shit,' he said.
Faust Amongst Equals Tom Holt Page 15