Flying Dutch Tom Holt

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Flying Dutch Tom Holt Page 23

by Flying Dutch (lit)


  Perhaps, Jane reflected, it won’t be on the news at all. What if Harvey and his colleagues have organised a total news black­out? Was that why he had driven away in such a hurry just after the helicopters took off? Jane was a child of the media age, and there lurked in the back of her mind the instinctive belief that if a thing wasn’t on the news, it couldn’t really have happened after all. So if Harvey could keep it off the air, perhaps the whole thing could unhappen, like a film projector with the film in backwards. No. Unlikely.

  Jane put down the remote control and wandered over to the window. Outside it was raining, that slow, gentle, extremely wet Cotswold rain that once used to turn watermills and was somehow or other connected with the rise of the wool trade. History had never been her best subject at school, and the wool trade had been the armpit of History as far as she was concerned, and so she found it hard to remember the details. What could rain possibly have to do with wool? Did it make the ground so soggy that you couldn’t keep cows because of foot-rot, so you had to keep sheep instead? Was rain connected with the wool trade at all? Had there ever been a wool trade? Yes, because she had met someone who had been involved in it. The Wool Trade, the Hanseatic League, the Spanish Netherlands, all that bit between Richard the Lion-Heart and Charles I, in the margins of which she had drawn little racing-cars. Strange, to think that one man could have seen all that.

  There was that song, she remembered. We joined the Navy to see the world, and what did we see? We saw the sea. And the Atlantic isn’t romantic and the Pacific isn’t terrific and the Black Sea isn’t what it’s cracked up to be. The poor man. It must have been awful for him.

  One thing in history that had registered with her was Robert the Bruce and the spider, because she was terrified of spiders. Back to the Ceefax, then, and let’s have one more go. Carefully, Jane selected the required index numbers for the Australian Football results and keyed them in. She got the Australian Foot­ball results, while the unseen orchestra played ‘They Call The Wind Maria’.

  Like St Paul on the road to Damascus, Jane suddenly under­stood. Nobody else did, but she understood. Standing there in her stockinged feet in a sitting room outside Cirencester, Jane Doland had single-handedly solved one of the most inscrutable mysteries of the twentieth century. She knew why they played background music to Ceefax, and the principle by which it was selected.

  All she needed to find now was the Professor’s decoder, but that wasn’t going to be easy. Given Montalban’s love of camou­flage, it could be anything; the Georgian tea service, the Dresden shepherdess, the ormulu clock, the little black box labelled ‘Decoder’...

  With trembling hands, she plugged it in and switched it on. As the television set launched into ‘Thank Heaven For Little Girls’, there was a buzzing noise from the box, a whistling, a hissing, and then a mechanical Dalek voice started to speak.

  ‘Melbourne,’ said the voice, ‘sixteen. Perth nil.’

  ‘Damn,’ said Jane, and in a sudden access of fury she snatched up the remote control and dashed it to the floor. There was a snowstorm of coloured lights on the screen, and the news headlines appeared.

  Jane peered at them. Latest on Dounreay crisis. Evacuation proceeding in orderly fashion. No cause for alarm as yet. Questions in the House. So that was how Harvey was handling it. How terribly unimaginative of him.

  Then she caught the subdued muttering of the Dalek in the black box. It was urging the world to buy. Buy equities, it was saying. Buy gilts. Buy municipal bonds. Buy short-dated government stocks. Buy breweries, industrials, communications, chemicals, entertainments, even unit trusts. Buy.

  Jane’s jaw dropped, and then she picked up the remote control, made a wish, and threw it at the wall. She got the City News. So that’s how it’s done.

  Share prices, she discovered, were going through the roof. FT All Share Index reaches all time peak. Dow Jones explodes in buying frenzy. Hang Seng hangs loose. What, Jane asked, is going on?

  The decoder wasn’t much help this time: it just kept on repeating its command to buy. Buy Czarist government securities. Buy South Sea Company five per cent Unsecured Loan Stock. A fat lot of help the decoder was being. Jane shrugged and went to look for a wireless.

  She eventually found a portable in the kitchen and tuned it to Radio Three. We apologise for the continued interruption to the scheduled programme, it was saying, owing to the Dounreay crisis. Meanwhile, we continue with our impromptu Gilbert and Sullivan medley, and now let’s hear ‘Three Little

  Maids From School’ from the D’Oyly Carte company’s 1956 recording of The Mikado.

  The decoder raised its voice to a hysterical scream, conjured the world in the bowels of Christ to buy De Lorean 25p Ordinary Shares, and blew up. Jane shook her head several times, switched off the radio and the television, and went to the kitchen for a cup of tea.

  The cat was having a thoroughly rotten time. It was hot, there were no mice, and slabs of pre-stressed concrete kept falling on its head. On the other hand, it had managed to get away from those lunatics with the silly names.

  In that ineffably feline way cats have, it arched its back, stretched, flexed its claws and started to stroll quietly, a cat walking by itself. Four centuries of existence had taught it a sort of unthinking optimism. Although the odds against it seemed long, there might be mice somewhere, or birds, or even a decomposing chicken carcass. In this room here, for instance.

  In the room there was a table, and on the table was a square white thing which the cat failed to recognise as a computer console. Made of the very latest space-age materials, it had not yet melted. It had been designed to withstand extremes of temperature which would long since have carbonised diamonds. This was necessary, because this was no ordinary playing-video-games computer, but the main instrument panel for the whole complex. Anything that was still capable of working inside this inferno was operated from here.

  But the cat wasn’t to know that. To the cat, it looked like a nice place to curl up and sleep. With a delicate little hop, the cat jumped onto the table and made its way to the centre of the console, its velvet-padded paws resting ever so lightly on the many labelled keys. The cat turned round three times, lay down and went to sleep.

  ‘Sebastian!’ Vanderdecker yelled. ‘Over there, to your left.’

  Sebastian looked round and saw the little patch of flame which was evidently distressing his commander. He stamped on it until it went out.

  They had been at it for hours, and they weren’t making much headway. It was a big building, and most of it was on fire, and it takes time to beat out flames with nothing but your bare hands and feet. Meanwhile the needle on the Professor’s geiger counter (this one was enclosed in a Fabergé egg) was slowly creeping higher. Not galloping, just creeping. Not galloping yet.

  ‘Look, Montalban,’ Vanderdecker gasped, ‘are we getting anywhere or not? This is not a time for conventional polite­ness.’

  ‘I’m afraid not,’ the Professor said. ‘The fire is too wide­spread. There just isn’t time to put it out this way.’

  Vanderdecker nodded. ‘So?’

  ‘Well,’ Montalban replied, ‘there doesn’t seem to be very much point in our staying here, does there?’

  Vanderdecker shook his head vigorously. ‘The hell with you,’ he said. ‘There has to be something we can do.’ He jumped on a patch of fire, more to relieve his feelings than for any other motive.

  ‘Unfortunately. . .‘ The Professor was suddenly quiet. The Fabergé egg started to tinkle out ‘The Blue Danube’. ‘Oh dear,’ he muttered sadly.

  ‘Now what?’

  ‘Situation critical,’ Montalban replied. ‘Such a pity.’

  ‘All right, all right,’ Vanderdecker shouted, ‘why don’t you do something for a change instead of going all to pieces like that?’ And he looked round for somebody to shout at. Just then, the first mate came up.

  ‘Skip,’ he said. ‘I’ve lost the cat.’

  ‘The what?’

  ‘The
cat. The guinea-pig. Whatever.’

  ‘Really?’ Vanderdecker growled. ‘What a bloody cataclysm!

  All right, let’s go and look for the perishing cat. I’m getting bored just standing here.’

  The first mate said that he had last seen it over there, so they went that way. And, in due course, they arrived at the door of the room with the computer console on it.

  ‘What’s in here?’ Vanderdecker asked, curiously. ‘It doesn’t seem as badly damaged as the rest of it all.’

  ‘It’s the computer room,’ Montalban replied. ‘Everything in here is the state of the art in heat-resistance technology .

  Shoo!’

  ‘Bless you,’ Vanderdecker said instinctively, but the Pro­fessor wasn’t sneezing. He was getting the cat off the console.

  ‘That explains it,’ he said. ‘That dratted animal has pressed all the wrong buttons.’ Montalban typed frantically for a moment, but the needle on the Fabergé egg continued to rise and ‘The Blue Danube’ was getting faster and faster. ‘It’s switched off most of the failsafe mechanisms,’ Montalban explained crossly. ‘You naughty boy!’ he said. The cat looked at him.

  ‘So that’s it, is it?’ Vanderdecker asked. ‘There really is nothing we can do?’

  ‘We could leave,’ the professor suggested, ‘before the entire complex blows up, with a force approximately nine hundred times that of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs put together. I think in the circumstances that leaving would be extremely prudent.’

  ‘Fine,’ Vanderdecker said. ‘You just shove off, then. I think I’ll stay here for a bit.’ He kicked the table.

  ‘Well, goodbye then,’ Montalban said, ‘it was so nice to have seen you again. Do drop in if ever you happen to be passing.’

  The Fabergé egg had stopped playing ‘The Blue Danube’ and struck up ‘The Minute Waltz’. Montalban dropped it, screamed, and fled.

  ‘Here, Captain,’ said Sebastian. Vanderdecker turned round and looked at him. He was standing by a small door like a safe-deposit box with a lurid black and red skull and crossbones stencilled on it. ‘Pirates?’ he suggested.

  ‘Very possibly, Sebastian,’ said the Flying Dutchman, ‘very possibly.’

  ‘Good,’ Sebastian said. ‘I always loved pirates,’ then he opened the door and walked in. There was a searing flash of blue light, and the world was blotted out.

  Half an hour later, Sebastian got up. He looked around, pinched himself, and swore.

  ‘All right then,’ he said to the sky, which was visible through a large hole in the ceiling. ‘I give up. Forget it. You win.’

  He realised he was still holding the handle of the door. The rest of the door was nowhere to be seen. Then he noticed something else. He sniffed.

  ‘Hello,’ said the voice from under the fallen lump of ceiling. ‘Is anybody there?’

  ‘Is that you captain?’

  ‘Yes. Sebastian?’

  ‘Captain,’ Sebastian said, and his voice was rather shaky, ‘I don’t think I smell any more. Do you think I smell, skip?’

  ‘I don’t know, Sebastian. I’m not sure. Perhaps if you got this slab of concrete off me, I might be able to give you a con­sidered opinion.’

  Sebastian thought for a moment, and then went to get the others. This took time, as some of them were similarly covered in architecture, but eventually they were all assembled and together they heaved Vanderdecker out from under the slab.

  ‘Thanks,’ he said, brushing dust off himself. ‘You’re right, Sebastian, you don’t. Has anyone seen my egg?’

  ‘Which egg?’

  ‘The shiny Stone egg that plays tunes, Antonius.’

  ‘Oh,’ said the first mate, ‘that egg. Here you are.’

  ‘Thank you.’ Vanderdecker looked at it for a moment. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘fancy that. Maybe it’s just broken.’ He shook it vigor­ously. The needle stayed resolutely on Normal.

  ‘In fact,’ Vanderdecker said, ‘none of us do.’

  ‘Do what, skip?’

  ‘Smell, Antonius. The smell would seem to have dis­appeared. Isn’t that jolly?’

  There was a ripple of whispering, and the crew of the Verdomde sniffed at each other. Then they started to cheer.

  All except Antonius, the first mate. He would have cheered, but something was puzzling him. As always, when he was puzzled he consulted his captain.

  ‘Skipper,’ he said, ‘why don’t we smell anymore?’

  ‘That,’ Vanderdecker replied, ‘is the thousand moidore question. Why indeed? I can only imagine...

  ‘Yes?’ Antonius said, his eyes alight with anticipation. Vanderdecker didn’t reply. He was frowning too.

  ‘Well anyway,’ he said. ‘I owe you a pint.’

  ‘Why, skipper?’

  ‘I promised I’d buy you a...

  ‘No,’ said Antonius, ‘not that. Why have we stopped smelling?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ Vanderdecker confessed. ‘I really don’t. Nor do I know why the power station has stopped burning and the radioactivity has dropped down to its normal ambient level. I’d ask the professor, only he isn’t here. It’s a real mystery, if you ask me.’

  ‘Oh.’ Antonius’s face had caved in. ‘You sure you don’t know?’

  Vanderdecker suddenly felt terribly guilty. ‘Of course,’ he said. ‘I’m only guessing, but purely off the top of my head it would just be that we took the full black of the explosion when Sebastian inadvertently opened some sort of pressure lock and triggered off the nuclear reaction, and that all the radiation crashing into our systems carried out some sort of molecular change that counteracted the molecular change that took place when we drank the elixir in the first place. Meanwhile, the sheer force of the explosion, which must have used up all the available oxygen inside the place, just snuffed out the flames and furthermore triggered off some sort of chain reaction which somehow or other reprocesses away all the loose radi­ation which had escaped previously. And here we all are. Do you see what I’m getting at?’

  ‘No,’ said Antonius happily. ‘But if that’s what you say happened, that’s good enough for me and the lads. Isn’t it, lads?’

  The lads, of course, hadn’t been listening. They were too busy cheering and yelling and generally not smelling horrible to listen to anything. But Vanderdecker had thought of some­thing; what if the reaction had indeed reversed the effects of the elixir? And they were now all mortal again?

  ‘I wonder,’ he said to himself.

  ‘What’s that, skipper?’ Antonius asked, and Vanderdecker pigeonholed the immortality question. He was just starting to realise what life without the ‘smell’ could possibly mean. So maybe he wasn’t immortal any longer. Maybe. There was no need to put it to the test immediately, now was there?

  ‘I was wondering,’ Vanderdecker said, ‘where we can get a pint or so of beer in these parts.’

  ‘And some clothes, skip,’ Antonius said. ‘We haven’t got any. They got burnt,’ he explained.

  ‘So they did,’ replied the Flying Dutchman. ‘We’d better get some more, hadn’t we?’

  ‘Good idea, skip,’ Antonius said. ‘Where?’

  Vanderdecker smiled. ‘Tell you what, Antonius,’ he said. ‘You think of something.’

  ‘Me?’

  ‘Yes, you.’

  ‘Oh.’ Antonius considered. ‘I don’t know,’ he said.

  ‘Don’t you?’ said the Flying Dutchman. ‘Sorry, I thought you were just going to volunteer to walk over to the nearest evacuated village, break a few windows, and come back with some clothes for us. Wasn’t that what you were just going to suggest?’

  ‘No,’ Antonius replied truthfully.

  ‘Well,’ Vanderdecker said, ‘what do you think of it, as a suggestion? You can be honest with me if you think it’s no good.’

  ‘I’ll give it a shot, skipper,’ Antonius said. ‘Which way to the village?’

  CHAPTER

  FIFTEEN

  Inside the helicopter, the party was still going
on. It was a bit cramped, and it swayed about rather more (considered objectively) that the hotel in Dounreay, but it was the con­sidered view of the crew of the Verdomde that while there was moonlight and laughter and Scotch and romance, they might as well face the music and get pathetically drunk. It wasn’t every day, after all, that you escape from a four-hundred-odd-year-old curse.

  ‘Here,’ Sebastian was saying to a bulkhead, ‘you remember that time in Nijmegen?’

  ‘That wasn’t Nijmegen,’ Pieter replied, ‘that was Antwerp.’

  ‘No it wasn’t,’ Sebastian retorted. ‘Antwerp was when you and me and Wilhelmus got completely ratted and went round smashing up all the watchmakers’ shops.’

  ‘Exactly,’ Pieter said, nodding vigorously, ‘that was Antwerp, not Nijmegen.’

  ‘That’s what I just said.’

  ‘You said Nijmegen.’

  ‘Hold on,’ Wilhelmus interrupted. ‘Nijmegen — —Nijmegen was when we nicked that old girl’s donkey and Jan Van Hoosemyr...’

  ‘I know,’ said Sebastian angrily. ‘That’s what I was trying to say. That was Nijmegen. Antwerp was when we smashed in all the watchmakers’...’

  ‘But you just said...’

  The camera crew looked at each other. ‘Reminds me of that time in Tripoli,’ said the cameraman. In fact, the only sober Dutchman on board the helicopter was Vanderdecker, and he was beginning to wonder if sobriety and a clear head were a good idea after all. Danny was trying to interview him, and he was finding it rather wearing.

  ‘So when did you first suspect,’ Danny was saying, ‘that there had been a cover-up?’

  Vanderdecker yanked his mind back to what Danny was saying. ‘Cover-up?’ he said. ‘Oh, sorry, I was miles away. What cover-up?’

  ‘The cover-up,’ Danny snapped. ‘When did you first become aware of it?’

  ‘Just now,’ Vanderdecker said, ‘when you mentioned it. Shows what a good cover-up it was, doesn’t it?’

  Danny ground his teeth. ‘We’ll do that bit again,’ he said, and would the tape back. ‘Look, will you please try and con­centrate on what I’m saying?’

 

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