Выбрать главу

“Don’t you come the raw prawn with me, mate,” the dragon replied irritably. “Jeez, what’s a bloke got to do before you’re satisfied?” He scowled, and mouthed the words Loads of money… The man shook his head.

“Money,” he said firmly, “isn’t everything. Look, is there some sort of ombudsman I can take this up with, because—”

“Excuse me,” said Jane.

“Ombudsman!” growled the dragon. “You take the flamin’ biscuit, you do. When I think of some of the stringy old dogs—”

“Yes, but just look, will you? There’s absolutely no way—”

“Excuse me.”

“Scheherezade,” continued the dragon, “had a face on her that’d curdle milk. You don’t know when you’re well-off, mate.”

“I am definitely going to complain to someone and when I’ve finished with you, you’ll be lucky to get a job swimming round and round in a small glass bowl—”

“Excuse me,” said Jane, “but I think your ship is sinking.”

“You keep out of this,” snapped Asaf. “Now then, I don’t propose wasting any more breath on you. I shall be seeking legal advice on this, and—”

“Stone the crows, mate, she’s right. Hey, there’s water coming up through the—”

“Don’t change the subject. My brother happens to be an accountant and I reckon we’re looking at breach of contract, breach of statutory duty, trespass to the person and a bloody great claim in respect of pain, suffering, inconvenience, loss of earnings…”

“Bugger me, she’s about to split. You want to get out of there quick, I’m telling you…”

“…false imprisonment, failure to report an accident, fraud, dangerous flying…”

“Look…”

The ship sank.

Funny, the way some ships just go under all of a sudden. Others hang around for days, leaning over on one side and allowing the survivors plenty of time to choose their eight gramophone records from the ship’s library. This one, however, just went glop! and fell through the surface of the water like a lead weight.

Sinbad the Sailor watched her go down from the comfort of the one lifeboat, and shrugged. On the one hand she had been his ship, in which he had crossed all the oceans of the world, and inevitably a part of his soul went down with her. On the other hand, he had just renewed his insurance.

The cramped living quarters, he thought. The smell of stale bilge water. The rats. The ship’s biscuits, some of which were hard enough to polish diamonds with. The crew.

As he watched the last few bubbles rise and fade, therefore, his feelings were mixed. About 40 per cent happiness, and the remaining 60 per cent pure unalloyed pleasure.

Kiss picked himself up off the clouds and snarled.

To every cloud, the wiseacres say, a silver lining. Be that as it may; this one, as far as Kiss could judge, was lined with big lumpy chunks of rock, half-bricks and the like. In his list of My All-Time Favourite Things To Land On, it didn’t score highly compared with, say, feather mattresses or trampoline cushions. It was also soggy and full of water vapour.

All in all he was working up a pretty good head of aggression. And the healthiest way to vent off the perfectly natural and wholesome aggression which lies buried in all of us is, of course, to thump somebody. Ask any psychiatrist.

Fortunately, he didn’t have far to look for someone to thump. Not far, and upwards.

Philly Nine looked down nervously. There was something about Kiss’s demeanour, and the way the cloud he was lying on was turning into fizzing steam, that made him feel uncomfortable and uncertain about his immediate future. He decided to try diplomacy.

“Now then,” he said pleasantly, “you don’t want to be late for your date, do you?”

“Yes.”

“But think,” Philly reasoned, “of that sweet little girl of yours, counting every second before you come swooping down to rescue her. Think of the grateful smile on her face, the words of praise, the—”

“Are we thinking of the same person?”

“What about your honour as a genie? Her wish is your command, remember.”

“When I catch you,” Kiss replied calmly, “I’m going to rip your lungs out.”

“If you catch me,” Philly replied, and fled.

“Excuse me,” said Jane.

Asaf glanced up from the piece of driftwood he was clinging to and frowned. “What?” he said.

“I said excuse me.”

The sea, fishermen say, is a cruel playfellow. Actually they tend to express themselves in earthier, more basic terms, but that’s the gist of it. For his part, Asaf had never really come to terms with the being-surrounded-on-all-sides-by-water aspect of fishing, despite his best endeavours, and consequently wasn’t really in the mood to make new friends. His tone, therefore, was abrupt.

“Piss off,” he said.

“Be like that,” Jane replied equably. “All I was going to say was, if you wanted a lift to dry land, I can take you as far as the coast. Probably,” she added, for she was a realist.

Asaf glowered up at the carpet, hovering about three feet over the waves. “I don’t believe in you,” he growled. “Go away.”

“Don’t believe in me?”

“You heard me. You’re some sort of fatuous mythical practical joke, like everything else that’s been happening to me lately. On the other hand, I do believe in this piece of driftwood. It’s not much, but right now it’s all I’ve got. Sling your hook.”

“HELP!” observed Justin.

Asaf lifted his head; suddenly, he was interested. By force of circumstance he was rapidly becoming attuned to the finer nuances of adventures, and it occurred to him that not many false visions of magic carpets have shit-scared young men clinging to them yelling “HELP!” A nice touch, he had to admit. Either that, or it wasn’t a mirage after all.

“Your friend,” he said.

Jane looked round. “Oh, him,” she said. “Yes?”

“Is he real?”

“I think so.”

“Ask him.”

Jane shrugged. “Excuse me,” she said.

“HELP!”

“Yes, but are you real? I mean, do you exist? Only the gentleman down there in the water…

“HELP HELP HELP!”

Jane nodded and turned back again. “I would take that as a Yes,” she said.

“I see.” A small wave partially dislodged Asaf’s grip on the driftwood and he floundered for a moment. “That puts rather a different complexion on it, don’t you think?”

“Sorry?”

“I wasn’t,” Asaf replied, “talking to you.”

“Oh.”

The Dragon King, who had drifted back into existence a few inches above the wave-tops, wiped his mouth on the back of his paw and nodded. “Too right, mate,” he said. “Sorry, forgetting me manners. You fancy a cold one?”

“Not now.” Asaf gave him a cold stare. “Look, for once be straight with me. Are those two for real?”

“You bet your life.”

“That,” Asaf replied, “is what I’m rather hoping I won’t have to do.”

“Yes,” said the King, “they’re real. And by the way,” he added in a whisper, “that’s her.”

“We’ll discuss that later. Now, how do I get on that thing without it tipping over?”

“She’ll be right mate, no worries. Just take a jump at it, and…”

Splash.

“Thanks,” said Asaf.

“That’s all right,” Jane replied, preoccupied. She was wondering how the hell she’d managed to get the carpet to swoop low over where Asaf had landed in the water and scoop him up with its front hem. Pretty snazzy rug-handling, by any standards. And she couldn’t remember what it was that she’d done.

Asaf cleared his throat diffidently. “You said something,” he mumbled, “about dry land.”

“Yes.”

“Well, if it wouldn’t be too much trouble…”

“It’d be a pleasure,” Jane replied. “Any dry land in particular?”

Like a blue crack in the firmament, a long streak of lightning snaked its way across the sky and earthed itself savagely in Kiss’s neck, hurling him seven miles through the air. There was a loathsome smell of singed flesh.