We approach the great front entrance. The family crest shows two goats copulating. The male has three testicles. And when a female visitor points this out to her immaculately dressed gentleman companion, he drops his trousers to reveal a similar arrangement. I don’t get to see what lies beneath her turquoise ballgown, but the man does and points at it with furious enthusiasm.
It’s unusual to see Calamari stuck for words. His rugged jaw line thrusts its way into my field of vision.
“During the conflicts, because of the Republicans and the danger in the cities and all that sort of thing, the Battencross clan chose to isolate themselves. They became self-sufficient in, er, all sorts of ways. Ways you or I might find a little… over-familiar.”
“Small genepool stuff?” I suggest euphemistically.
“Erm? You could put it that way. So… so don’t be surprised if you encounter people you might consider a little, er…special.”
“Inbred?”
“Special,” says Calamari coldly.
“I’m sure they’re all very nice people,” says I. I don’t condemn folk till after I’ve met them. Speaking of which…
I’ve been observing the goons over the course of the journey. They’ve got a hierarchy and a leader in the form of a huge, cauliflower-eared brute called Spencer. I doubt we’re ever going have a conversation about Art or classical music, but as far as belching and leering at women go, we get along fine. They follow Calamari’s directions to some loose degree, but there’s clearly no love lost between the factions.
“We usually take our orders from Mr Durham,” Spencer tells me. “Old Beetle Bollocks.”
“What kind of orders?” I ask.
“Oh, dishin’ out a few right-handers on an as-and-when basis,” he says, rearranging his knuckles. “Guess you could call us freelance troublemakers.”
“Oh,” I say. But I’m wandering off the point. Let’s backtrack a little:
“Inbred?” I say.
“Special,” says Calamari.
“I’m sure they’re all very nice people, Sir,” I say.
“Are you ‘special’, Sir?” asks Spencer, insolence etched all over his face. “You look ‘special’, Sir.”
Now Calamari may be intelligent and deeply political but let’s not forget that he’s also a man-mountain prone to violent rages and bouts of impromptu teeth-extraction. I’m expecting a violent reprisal, maybe something testicular loosened with a blunt penknife. Maybe the rules have changed, or the insane monster’s switched to a more effective medication, because he just laughs his horrid laugh and claps Spencer on the back. Spencer seems confused. Calamari just smiles. Spencer looks wary. Calamari adopts the tour guide position at the front of the bus. We’re all waiting for something nasty to happen. But it doesn’t. Not yet.
“Okay,” says Calamari. “Now, I think we all know why we’re here. This is a two-pronged mission: Jupiter, you’re to spike the drinks with surgical spirit, wait until they’re all half-poisoned and then roll Former Prime Minister Bactrian out. See if you can get them to pledge some money. Be polite – these are a better class of inbred. And, if Lady Battencross propositions you, you’re to give her whatever she wants however she wants it.” And he points to the door. “Now, Spencer,” he continues, “you and the Brownshirts: You’re to locate young Lord Battencross…”
“Sir…” I start, about to ask something important – can’t remember what it was now.
“That’s all you need know!” he barks. And he presses a jar of ethanol into my arms and shoves me down the steps. But the briefing’s still audible through the window so I listen in.
“…And deal with him,” Calamari concludes.
“Brutally?” Spencer asks.
“I’ll leave that to your professional judgement,” says Calamari. “Just keep it quick, quiet and clean. Keep that in mind and you can do whatever you want.”
It sounds like they’re planning to kill Lord Battencross, so I decide to stay in full public view the entire evening. I wouldn’t put it past Calamari to frame me. And I straighten my tie and stride purposefully into the manor.
Right. Imagine blocks, great stone blocks, piled in the halls, stacked haphazardly in the walls and slipping silently from the vaulted ceiling and almost braining me. Whatever money the estate generates, it clearly doesn’t go into maintenance. I’m inside the building now, but the moss, mould and toadstools say different. Pull back the ivy and you’ll see the family portraits; fifty variations on the Hapsburg-jaw.
I survey my fellow guests, all beautifully dressed and all deeply, deeply weird. Darwin would weep. Take a photograph and you’d have all you need to disprove evolution forever.
We push through the throng, past someone who may be Malmot in disguise, and there’s seething old dowager, Lady Digitalis Battencross, in all her cacky-fingered glory.
Okay. I want you to picture Lady Battencross. She’s an interesting looking woman. She used to travel to Africa to shoot endangered species and enjoy the last vestiges of institutionalised racism. On her last trip, she’d caught a particularly vicious stomach bug and lost two thirds of her bodyweight in the form of violently-evacuated excreta. What’s left no longer fits the epidermis. She looks like she’s been deflated. Her empty skin hangs in huge fabric-swathed folds, from armpit to ankle, like a flying squirrel. You’ve heard of ‘Dowager’s hump’. Well, this is ‘Dowager’s rudimentary wing membrane’. Throw her out the window and she’d glide.
You’d think looking like an airborne rodent would dampen her social standing. But you’d be wrong. You see, it’s what’s inside that counts. And what’s inside our Lady B. is a fully-functioning reproductive system. In a social circle that’s been inbreeding itself toward total sterility, a fertile woman’s hot property. Even a widowed old gorgon with a face like a bag of spanners can be a goddess.
She surrounds herself with arselickers, aspirants and dirty old toffs who want to impregnate her. It’s all too much for her son, Lord Timothy Battencross, eighteen years old, and currently skulking round the buffet with a scowl on his face.
Young Timmy is going through a rebellious phase, “searching for truth and honesty in a life hitherto characterised by bourgeois privilege.” His words, not mine. Like all teenagers, he likes to sit back and pass judgement on people, which is why he’s thrown his hat in with the Socialists. They love redistributing his trust fund for him. There’s talk he may become their next leader. He’s certainly ugly enough. Perhaps this is why Calamari wants him dead.
A drunken cellist counts his drunker ensemble into an unrecognisable piece of music and I gather the ball has started. Time to disguise my humble origins and work the room. And I try, but all I meet with are blank faces and quickly-turned backs. I could let it bother me, but I prefer to remain philosophical. After all, surely it’s better to be rejected by people who don’t know you than people who do. And I content myself with the knowledge that, however bad I’m doing, Elton would be doing worse.
I locate the only non-alcoholic drink in the building and I find myself a corner to hide in. And what do you know? The woman with the turquoise ballgown approaches me.
“Are you a baboon?” she asks. I’m at a loss for words.
We’re joined by the gentleman with the three testicles, unless I’m very much mistaken.
“Maybe he’s a rhesus monkey?” says the man. “I shot one of those in Rangoon.”
“No, dear,” the woman replies, “that was your father.”
“Really! And the gorilla I shot in Sumatra?”