Volume 4 - So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish

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Volume 4 - So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish Page 6

by Douglas Adams


  He sat and looked at the fishbowl. He tapped it again, and despite being full of water and a small yellow Babel fish which was gulping its way around rather dejectedly, it still chimed its deep and resonant chime as clearly and mesmerically as before.

  Someone is trying to thank me, he thought to himself. He wondered who, and for what.

  10

  “At the third stroke it will be one … thirty-two … and twenty seconds.”

  “Beep … beep … beep.”

  Ford Prefect suppressed a little giggle of evil satisfaction, realized that he had no reason to suppress it, and laughed out loud, a wicked laugh.

  He switched the incoming signal through from the Sub-Etha Net to the ship’s superb hi-fi system, and the odd, rather stilted singsong voice spoke out with remarkable clarity round the cabin.

  “At the third stroke it will be one … thirty-two … and thirty seconds.”

  “Beep … beep … beep.”

  He tweaked the volume up just a little, while keeping a careful eye on a rapidly changing table of figures on the ship’s computer display. For the length of time he had in mind, the question of power consumption became significant. He didn’t want a murder on his conscience.

  “At the third stroke it will be one … thirty-two … and forty seconds.”

  “Beep … beep … beep.”

  He checked around the small ship. He walked down the short corridor.

  “At the third stroke …”

  He stuck his head into the small, functional, gleaming steel bathroom.

  “ … it will be … “

  It sounded fine in there.

  He looked into the tiny sleeping quarters.

  “ … one … thirty-two …”

  It sounded a bit muffled. There was a towel hanging over one of the speakers. He took down the towel.

  “ … and fifty seconds.”

  Fine.

  He checked out the packed cargo hold, and wasn’t at all satisfied with the sound. There was altogether too much crated junk in the way. He stepped back out and waited for the door to seal. He broke open a closed control panel and pushed the jettison button. He didn’t know why he hadn’t thought of that before. A whooshing, rumbling noise died away quickly into silence. After a pause a slight hiss could be heard again.

  It stopped.

  He waited for the green light to show and then opened the door again onto the new empty cargo hold.

  “ … one … thirty-three … and fifty seconds.”

  Very nice.

  “Beep … beep … beep.”

  He then went and had a last thorough examination of the emergency suspended animation chamber, which was where he particularly wanted it to be heard.

  “At the third stroke it will be one … thirty-four … precisely.”

  He shivered as he peered down through the heavily frosted covering at the dim bulk of the form within. One day, who knew when, it would wake, and when it did, it would know what time it was. Not exactly local time, true, but what the heck.

  He double-checked the computer display above the freezer bed, dimmed the lights, and checked it again.

  “At the third stroke it will be … “

  He tiptoed out and returned to the control cabin.

  “ … one … thirty-four and twenty seconds.”

  The voice sounded as clear as if he were hearing it over a phone in London, which he wasn’t, not by a long way.

  He gazed out into the inky night. The star he could see in the distance the size of a brilliant biscuit crumb was Zondostina, or as it was known on the world from which the rather stilted, singsong voice was being received, Pleiades Zeta.

  The bright orange curve that filled over half the visible area was the giant gas planet Sesefras Magna, where the Xaxisian battleships docked, and just rising over its horizon was a small cool blue moon, Epun.

  “At the third stroke it will be … “

  For twenty minutes he sat and merely watched as the gap between the ship and Epun closed, as the ship’s computer teased and kneaded the numbers that would bring it into a loop around the little moon, close the loop and keep it there, orbiting in perpetual obscurity.

  “One … fifty-nine …”

  His original plan had been to close down all external signaling and radiation from the ship, to render it as nearly invisible as possible unless you were actually looking at it, but then he’d had an idea he preferred. It would now emit one single continuous beam, pencil thin, broadcasting the incoming time signal to the planet of the signal’s origin, which it would not reach for four hundred years, traveling at light-speed, but where it would probably cause something of a stir when it did.

  “Beep … beep … beep …”

  He sniggered.

  He didn’t like to think of himself as the sort of person who giggled or sniggered, but he had to admit that he had been giggling and sniggering almost continuously for well over half an hour now.

  “At the third stroke …”

  The ship was now locked almost perfectly into its perpetual orbit round a little-known and never-visited moon. Almost perfect.

  One thing only remained. He ran again the computer simulation of the launching of the ship’s little Escape-O-Buggy, balancing actions, reactions, tangential forces, all the mathematical poetry of motion, and saw that it was good.

  Before he left, he turned out the lights.

  As his tiny little cigar tube of an escape craft zipped out on the beginning of its three-day journey to the orbiting space station Port Sesefron, it rode for a few seconds a long pencil-thin beam of radiation that was starting out on a longer journey still.

  “At the third stroke, it will be two … thirteen … and fifty seconds.”

  He giggled and sniggered. He would have laughed out loud but he didn’t have room.

  “Beep … beep … beep.”

  11

  “April showers I hate especially.”

  However noncommittally Arthur grunted, the man seemed determined to talk to him. He wondered if he should get up and move to another table, but there didn’t seem to be one free in the whole cafeteria. He stirred his coffee fiercely.

  “Bloody April showers. Hate, hate, hate.”

  Arthur stared, frowning, out the window. A light, sunny spray of rain hung over the motorway. Two months he’d been back now. Slipping back into his old life had in fact been laughably easy. People had such extraordinarily short memories, including him. Eight years of crazed wanderings round the Galaxy now seemed to him not so much like a bad dream as like a film he had videotaped off television and now kept in the back of a cupboard without bothering to watch.

  One effect that still lingered, though, was his joy at being back. Now that the Earth’s atmosphere had closed over his head for good, he thought wrongly, everything within it gave him extraordinary pleasure. Looking at the silvery sparkle of the raindrops he felt he had to protest.

  “Well, I like them,” he said suddenly, “and for all the obvious reasons. They’re light and refreshing. They sparkle and make you feel good.”

  The man snorted derisively.

  “That’s what they all say,” he said, and glowered darkly from his corner seat.

  He was a lorry driver. Arthur knew this because his opening, unprovoked remark had been, “I’m a lorry driver. I hate driving in the rain. Ironic, isn’t it? Bloody ironic.”

  If there was a sequitur hidden in this remark, Arthur had not been able to divine it and had merely given a little grunt, affable but not encouraging.

  But the man had not been deterred then, and was not deterred now. “They all say that about bloody April showers,” he said, “so bloody nice, so bloody refreshing, such charming bloody weather.”

  He leaned forward, screwing his face up as if he was going to say something extraordinary about the government.

  “What I want to know is this,” he said, “if it’s going to be nice weather, why,” he almost spat, “can’t it be nice without bloody r
aining?”

  Arthur gave up. He decided to leave his coffee, which was too hot to drink quickly and too nasty to drink cold.

  “Well, there you go,” he said, and instead got up himself. “’Bye.”

  He stopped off at the service station shop, then walked back through the parking lot, making a point of enjoying the fine play of rain in his face. There was even, he noticed, a faint rainbow glistening over the Devon hills. He enjoyed that, too.

  He climbed into his battered but adored old black VW Rabbit, squealed the tires, and headed out past the islands of gas pumps and along the slip road to the motorway.

  He was wrong in thinking that the atmosphere of the Earth had closed finally and forever above his head.

  He was wrong to think that it would ever be possible to put behind him the tangled web of irresolutions into which his galactic travels had dragged him.

  He was wrong to think he could now forget that the big, hard, oily, dirty, rainbow-hung Earth on which he lived was a microscopic dot on a microscopic dot lost in the unimaginable infinity of the Universe.

  He drove on, humming, being wrong about all these things.

  The reason he was wrong was standing by the slip road under a small umbrella.

  His jaw sagged. He sprained his ankle against the brake pedal and skidded so hard he very nearly turned the car over.

  “Fenny!” he shouted.

  Having narrowly avoided hitting her with the actual car, he hit her instead with the car door as he leaned across and flung it open.

  It caught her hand and knocked away the umbrella from it, which then bowled wildly away across the road.

  “Shit!” yelled Arthur as helpfully as he could, leaped out of his own door, narrowly avoided being run down by McKenna’s All-Weather Haulage, and watched in horror as it ran down Fenny’s umbrella instead. The lorry swept along the motorway and away.

  The umbrella lay like a recently swatted daddy longlegs, expiring sadly on the ground. Tiny gusts of wind made it twitch a little.

  He picked it up.

  “Er,” he said. There didn’t seem to be a lot of point in offering the thing back to her.

  “How did you know my name?” she said.

  “Er, well,” he said, “look, I’ll get you another one.”

  He looked at her and tailed off.

  She was tallish with dark hair which fell in waves around a pale and serious face. Standing still, alone, she seemed almost somber, like a statue to some important but unpopular virtue in a formal garden. She seemed to be looking at something other than what she looked as if she was looking at.

  But when she smiled, as she did now, suddenly, it was as if she had just arrived from somewhere. Warmth and life flooded into her face, and impossibly graceful movement into her body. The effect was very disconcerting, and it disconcerted Arthur like hell.

  She grinned, tossed her bag into the back, and swiveled herself into the front seat.

  “Don’t worry about the umbrella,” she said to him as she climbed in, “it was my brother’s and he can’t have liked it or he wouldn’t have given it to me.” She laughed and pulled on her seat belt. “You’re not a friend of my brother’s, are you?”

  “No.”

  Her voice was the only part of her which didn’t say “Good.”

  Her physical presence there in the car, his car, was quite extraordinary to Arthur. He felt, as he let the car pull slowly away, that he could hardly think or breathe, and hoped that neither of these functions was vital to his driving or they were in trouble.

  So what he had experienced in the other car, her brother’s car, the night he had returned exhausted and bewildered from his nightmare years in the stars had not been the unbalance of the moment or, if it had been, he was at least twice as unbalanced now, and quite liable to fall off whatever it is that well-balanced people are supposed to be balancing on.

  “So …” he said, hoping to kick the conversation off to an exciting start.

  “He was supposed to pick me up—my brother—but phoned to say he couldn’t make it. I asked about buses but the man started to look at a calendar rather than a timetable, so I decided to hitch. So.”

  “So.”

  “So here I am. And what I would like to know, is how you know my name.”

  “Perhaps we ought to first sort out,” said Arthur, looking back over his shoulder as he eased his car into the motorway traffic, “where I’m taking you.”

  Very close, he hoped, or a long way. Close would mean she lived near him, a long way would mean he could drive her there.

  “I’d like to go to Taunton,” she said, “please. If that’s all right. It’s not far. You can drop me at—”

  “You live in Taunton?” he said, hoping that he’d managed to sound merely curious rather than ecstatic. Taunton was wonderfully close to him. He could …

  “No, London,” she said, “there’s a train in just under an hour.”

  It was the worst thing possible. Taunton was only minutes away up the motorway. He wondered what to do, and while he was wondering heard himself, with horror, saying, “Oh, I can take you to London. Let me take you to London.…”

  Bungling idiot. Why on earth had he said “let” in that stupid way? He was behaving like a twelve-year-old.

  She looked at him severely.

  “Are you going to London?” she asked.

  “Yes,” he didn’t say.

  “And I’ve got to step on it,” he failed to add, omitting to glance at his watch.

  “I wasn’t,” he said, “but …” Bungling idiot.

  “It’s very kind of you,” she said, “but really no. I like to go by train.” And suddenly she was gone. Or rather, that part of her which brought her to life was gone. She looked rather distantly out the window and hummed lightly to herself.

  He couldn’t believe it.

  Thirty seconds into the conversation, and already he’d blown it.

  Grown men, he told himself, in flat contradiction of centuries of accumulated evidence about the way grown men behave, do not behave like this.

  Taunton 5 miles, said the signpost.

  He gripped the steering wheel so tightly the car wobbled.

  He was going to have to do something dramatic.

  “Fenny,” he said.

  She glanced round sharply at him. “You still haven’t told me how—”

  “Listen,” said Arthur, “I will tell you, though the story is rather strange. Very strange.”

  She was still looking at him, but said nothing.

  “Listen …”

  “You said that.”

  “Did I? Oh. There are things I must talk to you about, and things I must tell you … a story I must tell you which would …” He was thrashing about. He wanted something along the lines of “Thy knotted and combined locks to part,/ And each particular hair to stand on end,/Like quills upon the fretful porcupine” but didn’t think he could carry it off and didn’t like the hedgehog reference.

  “ … which would take more than five miles,” he settled for in the end, rather lamely, he was afraid.

  “Well …”

  “Just supposing,” he said, “just supposing”—he didn’t know what was coming next, so he thought he’d just sit back and listen—“that there was some extraordinary way in which you were very important to me, and that, though you didn’t know it, I was very important to you, but it all went for nothing because we only had five miles and I was a stupid idiot at knowing how to say something very important to someone I’ve only just met and not crash into lorries at the same time, what would you say …” He paused, helplessly, and looked at her.

  “ … I should do?”

  “Watch the road!” she yelped.

  “Shit!”

  He narrowly avoided careening into the side of a hundred Italian washing machines in a German lorry.

  “I think,” she said, with a momentary sigh of relief, “you should buy me a drink before my train goes.”

  12 />
  There is, for some reason, something especially grim about pubs near stations, a very particular kind of grubbiness, a special kind of pallor to the pork pies.

  Worse than the pork pies, though, are the sandwiches. There is a feeling which persists in England that making a sandwich interesting, attractive, or in any way pleasant to eat is something sinful that only foreigners do.

  “Make ’em dry” is the instruction buried somewhere in the collective national consciousness, “make ’em rubbery. If you have to keep the buggers fresh, do it by washing ’em once a week.”

  It is by eating sandwiches in pubs at Saturday lunchtime that the British seek to atone for whatever their national sins have been. They’re not altogether clear what those sins are, and don’t want to know either. Sins are not the sort of things one wants to know about. But whatever sins there are are amply atoned for by the sandwiches they make themselves eat.

  If there is anything worse than the sandwiches, it is the sausages which sit next to them. Joyless tubes, full of gristle, floating in a sea of something hot and sad, stuck with a plastic pin in the shape of a chef’s hat: a memorial, one feels, for some chef who hated the world, and died, forgotten and alone among his cats on a back stair in Stepney.

  The sausages are for the ones who know what their sins are and wish to atone for something specific.

  “There must be somewhere better,” said Arthur.

  “No time,” said Fenny, glancing at her watch, “my train leaves in half an hour.”

  They sat at a small wobbly table. On it were some dirty glasses, and some soggy beer mats with jokes printed on them. Arthur got Fenny a tomato juice, and himself a pint of yellow water with gas in it. And a couple of sausages, he didn’t know why. He bought them for something to do while the gas settled in his glass.

  The barman dunked Arthur’s change in a pool of beer on the bar, for which Arthur thanked him.

  “All right,” said Fenny, glancing at her watch, “tell me what it is you have to tell me.”

  She sounded, as well she might, extremely skeptical, and Arthur’s heart sank. Hardly, he felt, the most conducive setting to try to explain to her as she sat there, suddenly cool and defensive, that in a sort of out-of-body dream he had had a telepathic sense that the mental breakdown she had suffered had been connected with the fact that, appearances to the contrary notwithstanding, the Earth had been demolished to make way for a new hyperspace bypass, something which he alone on Earth knew anything about, having virtually witnessed it from a Vogon spaceship, and that furthermore both his body and soul ached for her unbearably and he needed deeply to go to bed with her as soon as was humanly possible.

 

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