‘Hey, remember when Gerhardt the Boot and his lads had us cornered in that — ing cellar in Quirm?’ he said. ‘Remember what we did to him afterwards?’
‘Yes,’ said Mr Pin, staring at the blank wall. ‘I remember.’
‘And that time with that old man who was in that house in Genua and we didn’t — ing know? So we nailed up the door and—’
‘Shut up! Shut up!’
‘Just trying to look on the — ing bright side.’
‘We shouldn’t have killed all those people …’ Mr Pin whispered, almost to himself.
‘Why not?’ said Mr Tulip, but Pin’s nervousness had got through to him again. He pulled at the leather cord around his neck and felt the reassuring lump on the end. A potato can be a great help in times of trial.
A pattering behind him made him turn round, and he brightened up.
‘Anyway, we’re okay now,’ he said. ‘Looks like it’s — ing raining.’
Silver droplets were pouring through the cellar hatch.
‘That’s not water!’ screamed Pin, standing up.
The drops ran together, became a steady stream. It splashed oddly and mounded up under the hatch, but more liquid poured on top of it and spread out across the floor.
Pin and Tulip backed against the far wall.
‘That’s hot lead,’ said Pin. ‘They print their paper with it!’
‘How — ing much is there going to be?’
‘Down here? Can’t end up more than a couple of inches, can it?’
At the other side of the cellar Otto’s bench started to smoulder as the pool touched it.
‘We need something to stand on,’ said Pin. ‘Just while it cools! It won’t take long in this chill!’
‘Yeah, but there’s nothing here but us! We’re — ing trapped!’
Mr Pin put his hand over his eyes for a moment and took a deep breath of air that was already getting very warm in the soft silver rain.
He opened his eyes again. Mr Tulip was watching him obediently. Mr Pin was the thinker.
‘I’ve … got a plan,’ he said.
‘Yeah, good. Right.’
‘My plans are pretty good, right?’
‘Yeah, you come up with some — ing wonders, I’ve always said. Like when you said we should twist the—’
‘And I’m always thinking about the good of the Firm, right?’
‘Yeah, sure, right.’
‘So … this plan … it’s not, like, a perfect plan, but … oh, the hell with it. Give me your potato.’
‘What?’
Suddenly Mr Pin’s arm was stretched out, his crossbow an inch from Mr Tulip’s neck.
‘No time to argue! Gimme the damn potato right now! This is no time for you to think!’
Uncertain, but trusting as ever in Mr Pin’s survival abilities in a tight corner, Mr Tulip pulled the thong of the potato over his head and handed it to Mr Pin.
‘Right,’ said Mr Pin, one side of his face beginning to twitch. ‘The way I see it—’
‘You better hurry!’ said Mr Tulip. ‘It’s only a coupla inches away!’
‘—the way I see it, I’m a small man, Mr Tulip. You couldn’t stand on me. I wouldn’t do. You’re a big man, Mr Tulip. I wouldn’t want to see you suffer.’
And he pulled the trigger. It was a good shot.
‘Sorry,’ he whispered, as the lead splashed. ‘Sorry. I’m sorry. Sorry. But I wasn’t born to fry …’
Mr Tulip opened his eyes.
There was darkness around him, but with a suggestion of stars overhead behind an overcast sky. The air was still, but there was distant soughing, as of wind in dead trees.
He waited a while to see if anything would happen, and then said: ‘Anyone — ing there?’
JUST ME, MR TULIP.
Some of the darkness opened its eyes, and two blue glows looked down at him.
‘The — ing bastard stole my potato. Are you — ing Death?’
JUST DEATH WILL SUFFICE, I THINK. WHO WERE YOU EXPECTING?
‘Eh? For what?’
TO CLAIM YOU AS ONE OF THEIRS.
‘Dunno, really. I never — ing thought …’
YOU NEVER SPECULATED?
‘All I know is, you got to have your potato, and then it will be all right.’ Mr Tulip parroted the sentence without thinking, but it was coming back now in the total recall of the dead, from a vantage point of two feet off the ground and three years of age. Old men mumbling. Old women weeping. Shafts of light through holy windows. The sound of wind under the doors, and every ear straining to hear the soldiers. Us or theirs didn’t matter, when a war had gone on this long …
Death gave the shade of Mr Tulip a long, cool stare.
AND THAT’S IT?
‘Right.’
YOU DON’T THINK THERE WERE ANY BITS YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED?
… the sound of wind under the doors, the smell of the oil lamps, the fresh acid smell of snow, blowing in through the …
‘And … if I’m sorry for everything …’ he mumbled. He was lost in a world of darkness, without a potato to his name.
… candlesticks … they’d been made of gold, hundreds of years ago … there were only ever potatoes to eat, grubbed up from under the snow, but the candlesticks were of gold … and some old woman, she’d said: ‘It’ll all turn out right if you’ve got a potato …’
WAS ANY GOD OF SOME SORT MENTIONED TO YOU AT ANY POINT?
‘No …’
DAMN. I WISH THEY DIDN’T LEAVE ME TO DEAL WITH THIS SORT OF THING, Death sighed. YOU BELIEVE, BUT YOU DON’T BELIEVE IN ANYTHING.
Mr Tulip stood with his head bowed. More memories were trickling back now, like blood under a closed door. And the knob was rattling, and the lock had failed.
Death nodded at him.
AT LEAST YOU STILL HAVE YOUR POTATO, I SEE.
Mr Tulip’s hand flew to his neck. There was something wizened and hard there, on the end of a string. It had a ghostly shimmer to it.
‘I thought he got it!’ he said, his face alight with hope.
AH, WELL. YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN A POTATO MIGHT TURN UP.
‘So it’s all going to be all right?’
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Mr Tulip swallowed. Lies did not survive long out here. And more recent memories were squeezing under the door now, bloody and vengeful.
‘I think it’s gonna take more than a potato,’ he said.
ARE YOU SORRY FOR EVERYTHING?
More unused bits of Mr Tulip’s brain, which had shut down long ago or had never even opened up, came into play.
‘How will I know?’ he said.
Death waved a hand through the air. Along the arc described by the bony fingers appeared a line of hourglasses.
I UNDERSTAND YOU ARE A CONNOISSEUR, MR TULIP. IN A SMALL WAY, SO AM I. Death selected one of the glasses and held it up. Images appeared around it, bright but insubstantial as shadow.
‘What are they?’ said Tulip.
LIVES, MR TULIP. JUST LIVES. NOT ALL MASTERPIECES, OBVIOUSLY, OFTEN RATHER NAIF IN THEIR USE OF EMOTION AND ACTION, BUT NEVERTHELESS FULL OF INTEREST AND SURPRISE AND, EACH IN THEIR OWN WAY, A WORK OF SOME GENIUS. AND CERTAINLY VERY … COLLECTABLE. Death picked up an hourglass as Mr Tulip tried to back away. YES. COLLECTABLE. BECAUSE, IF I HAD TO FIND A WAY TO DESCRIBE THESE LIVES, MR TULIP, THAT WORD WOULD BE ‘SHORTER’.
Death selected another hourglass. AH. NUGGA VELSKI. YOU WILL NOT REMEMBER HIM, OF COURSE. HE WAS SIMPLY A MAN WHO WALKED INTO HIS RATHER SIMPLE LITTLE HUT AT THE WRONG TIME, AND YOU ARE A BUSY MAN AND CANNOT BE EXPECTED TO REMEMBER EVERYONE. NOTE THE MIND, A BRILLIANT MIND THAT MIGHT IN OTHER CIRCUMSTANCES HAVE CHANGED THE WORLD, DOOMED TO BE BORN INTO A TIME AND PLACE WHERE LIFE WAS NOTHING BUT A DAILY, HOPELESS STRUGGLE. NEVERTHELESS, IN HIS TINY VILLAGE, RIGHT UP UNTIL THE DAY HE FOUND YOU STEALING HIS COAT, HE DID HIS BEST TO—