“I personally dislike your appearance,” he tells me, and I breath a heavy sigh of relief. “It’s that look of low cunning, like you’re about to tunnel into a chicken coop and scamper away with feathers in your teeth. But I know the general public and I know their preference for people of middling intelligence. Nobody likes a smart arse, after all. And the ladies – the ladies love a hint of danger. And you’ve got it, Jupiter, what with your care home upbringing, your long fingers and your major personality flaws. You’ve no conscience. You’ve killed. I don’t care what they say in polite company, women find that kind of thing sexy!”
“If it’s alright with you, Sir,” I try, “I’d rather not discuss the hanging.”
“Nonsense, Jupiter! It was your finest hour. If you hadn’t proved your worth back then… Well, you’ve served your initial purpose; we were going to have you destroyed. But we saw another side to you there and it set me thinking. And talking to you now, about smacking the smile from God’s smug face, I can see you’ve got a certain fire in your belly, and it occurs to me that we might extend your duties into the public arena.”
Now this is starting to sound ominous.
“Look down, Jupiter. Tell me what you see.”
“Tarmac, Sir.”
“Yes, Jupiter. Tarmac. We’re standing on a runway. Now why, you might ask, would we need a runway?”
“Aeroplanes, Sir.”
“Exactly! But we don’t have any aeroplanes, do we?”
“What about The Phoenix?”
“It exploded on takeoff. But just because we don’t have any aeroplanes now, it doesn’t mean we won’t have any in the near future. And this is where you come in again.”
“I don’t understand.”
“You don’t have to.” He pauses, looking me up and down. “Ever done any acting?”
“I pass myself off as a decent human being every day.”
“Good answer! Now do me a favour will you: stand up straight, shoulders back and smile like you’re stifling wind.”
I have no idea what I’m supposed to be doing, but I do it anyway.
“Now repeat after me: We must crush the jackal of upstart American imperialism beneath the boot heel of English military might!”
“We must crush the jackal of upstart American… Eh? What?” I’m halfway through the sentence before I realise what I’m saying and start to suspect where it’s going.
“Ha hah!” cries Malmot and claps.
“?” I ask with my eyebrows.
“!” he answers with his.
But there are very few nouns in the facial-movement dictionary so we resume verbal communication.
“You’ll be wondering where these aeroplanes are coming from,” he resumes. “Are you familiar with the CIA?”
“The Central Intelligence Agency?”
“The Central Interference Agency more like. You name it, they’ve fiddled with it. I don’t think there’s one part of South America they haven’t funded to overthrow another. And if we look to the Middle East, there’s the arming of the Mujahideen against the Soviets, shoring up the Northern Alliance to fight the Taliban and a couple of decades spent fucking around with Iraq and Iran… I could go on, but we’d be here till morning. I’ve long since stopped seeing the logic in it myself. I suspect they pull the names out of a big Uncle-Sam top hat and hold a sweepstake on the outcome.”
“Yes, but I still don’t see how this concerns me.”
“Very simple, my fine young friend. They’re going to fund me to topple you.”
Sometimes I wonder if I’m actually dead. They say we create our own Hells. And with my nasty little mind, well, what could be more unpleasant than the continuation of my own nasty little existence? And then I start wondering how I died and, when no suitable demise springs to mind, I’m forced to conclude that I’m still alive. Such is the case on this occasion.
“Oh, don’t worry. I’m not going to ask you to do anything particularly complex,” Malmot continues. “I don’t know how you handle responsibility, but I doubt it’s particularly well. No, your job will be to stand on balconies looking grimly determined and saluting.”
“And threatening American interests.”
“There may be an element of that. Yes.”
“And getting shot at, no doubt.”
“There’s probably a large element of that.”
“And what if I don’t fancy it?”
“Then we stick your head on Davenport’s corpse and you do it anyway.”
“Dead?”
“That was the impression I was trying to convey.”
“Oh!”
“Yes. Oh!”
“Then you have my full and wholehearted support,” I growl through gritted teeth.
“Excellent. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have the recapture of the capital to plan. I’d be grateful if you’d retire to your quarters and design yourself a uniform.”
“What kind?”
“Black, of course. And don’t forget the hat. I’m thinking ostrich feathers, that sort of thing.”
“But it’ll look ridiculous!”
“No, Jupiter, you’ll look ridiculous. That’s the whole point. The world needs to hate you, and it can start by hating your dress sense. I haven’t time to let your Inner Twat shine through.”
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You might also like to read MOBIUS by Ann Abrams
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Copyright
First published 2013
© Not So Noble Books