Lady LeJean had been incarnate much longer than the others. Time can change a body, especially when you’ve never had one before. She wouldn’t have stared and fumed. She would have clubbed the doctor to the ground. What was one more human?
She realized, with some amazement, that the thought there was a human thought.
But the other six were still wet behind the ears. They hadn’t yet realized the dimensions of duplicity that you needed to survive as a human being. They clearly found it hard to think inside the little dark world behind the eyes, too. Auditors reached decisions in concert with thousands, millions of other Auditors.
Sooner or later they’d learn to be their own thinkers, though. It might take a while, because they’d try to learn from one another first.
At the moment they were watching Igor’s tea tray with great suspicion.
‘Drinking tea is protocol,’ said Lady LeJean. ‘I must insist.’
‘Is this correct?’ Mr White barked at Dr Hopkins.
‘Oh, yes,’ said the doctor. ‘With a ginger biscuit, usually,’ he added hopefully.
‘A ginger biscuit,’ repeated Mr White. ‘A biscuit of red-brown colouring?’
‘Yeth, thur,’ said Igor. He nodded to the plate on his tray.
‘I would like to try a ginger biscuit,’ volunteered Miss Red.
Oh yes, thought Lady LeJean, please try the ginger biscuits.
‘We do not eat or drink!’ snapped Mr White. He gave Lady LeJean a look of deep suspicion. ‘It could cause incorrect ways of thinking.’
‘But it is the custom,’ said Lady LeJean. ‘To ignore protocol is to draw attention.’
Mr White hesitated. But he was a quick adaptor.
‘It is against our religion!’ he said. ‘Correct!’
It was an amazing leap. It was inventive. And he’d come up with it all alone. Lady LeJean was impressed. The Auditors had tried to understand religion, because so much that made no sense whatsoever was done in its name. But it could also excuse practically any kind of eccentricity. Genocide, for example. By comparison, a lack of tea drinking was easy.
‘Yes, indeed!’ said Mr White, turning to the other Auditors. ‘Is that not true?’
‘Yes, that is not true. Indeed!’ said Mr Green desperately.
‘Oh?’ said Dr Hopkins. ‘I did not know there was any religion that forbade tea.’
‘Indeed!’ said Mr White. Lady LeJean could almost feel his mind racing. ‘It is a … yes, it is a drink of the … correct … it is a drink of the … extremely bad negatively regarded gods. It is a … correct … it is a commandment of our religion to … yes … to shun ginger biscuits also.’ There was sweat on his forehead. For an Auditor, this was genius-level creativity. ‘Also,’ he went on slowly, as if reading the words off some page invisible to everyone else, ‘our religion … correct! … our religion demands that the clock be started now! For … who may know when the hour may be?’
Despite herself, Lady LeJean nearly applauded.
‘Who indeed?’ said Dr Hopkins.
‘I, I absolutely agree,’ said Jeremy, who had been staring at Lady LeJean. ‘I don’t understand who you … why there’s all this fuss … I don’t understand why … oh, dear … I’m having a headache …’
Dr Hopkins spilled his tea because of the speed with which he got up and reached into his coat pocket.
‘AhitsohappensIwaspassingtheapothecaryonmywayhere—’ he began, all in one breath.
‘I feel it’s not the time to start the clock,’ said Lady LeJean, edging herself along the desk. The hammer was still invitingly there.
‘I’m seeing those little flashes of light, Dr Hopkins,’ said Jeremy urgently, staring into the middle distance.
‘Not the flashes of light! Not the flashes of light!’ said Dr Hopkins. He grabbed a teaspoon off Igor’s tray, stared at it, threw it over his shoulder, tipped the tea out of a cup, opened the bottle of blue medicine by smashing the top off on the edge of the bench, and poured a cupful, spilling quite a lot of it in his hurry.
The hammer was inches away from her ladyship’s hand. She didn’t dare look round, but she could sense it there. While the Auditors stared at the trembling Jeremy, she let her fingers walk across the bench. She wouldn’t even have to move. A brisk overarm throw should do it.
She saw Dr Hopkins try to put the cup to Jeremy’s lips. The boy put his hands over his face and elbowed the cup out of the way, spilling the medicine across the floor.
Then Lady LeJean’s fingers were grasping the handle. She brought her hand round and hurled the hammer directly at the clock.
Tick
The war was going badly for the weaker side. Their positioning was wrong, their tactics ragged, their strategy hopeless. The Red army advanced across the whole front, dismembering the scurrying remnant of the collapsing Black battalions.
There was room for only one anthill on this lawn …
Death found War down among the grass blades. He admired attention to detail. War was in full armour, too, but the human heads he normally had tied to his saddle had been replaced by ant heads, feelers and all.
DO THEY NOTICE YOU, DO YOU THINK? he said.
‘I doubt it,’ said War.
NEVERTHELESS, IF THEY DID, I’M SURE THEY WOULD APPRECIATE IT.
‘Ha! Only decent theatre of war around these days,’ said War. ‘That’s what I like about ants. The buggers don’t learn, what?’
IT HAS BEEN RATHER PEACEFUL OF LATE, I AGREE, said Death.
‘Peaceful?’ said War. ‘Ha! I may as well change m’name to “Police Action”, or “Negotiated Settlement”! Remember the old days? Warriors used to froth at the mouth! Arms and legs bouncing in all directions! Great times, eh?’ He leaned across and slapped Death on the back. ‘I’ll bag ’em and you tag ’em, what?’
This looked hopeful, Death thought.
TALKING OF THE OLD DAYS, he said carefully, I’M SURE YOU REMEMBER THE TRADITION OF RIDING OUT?
War gave him a puzzled look. ‘Mind’s a blank on that one, old boy.’
I SENT OUT THE CALL.
‘Can’t say it rings a bell …’
APOCALYPSE? said Death. END OF THE WORLD?
War continued to stare. ‘Definitely knocking, old chap, but no-one’s home. And talking of home …’ War looked around at the twitching remains of the recent slaughter. ‘Spot of lunch?’
Around them the forest of grass grew shorter and smaller until it was, indeed, no more than grass, and became the lawn outside a house.
It was an ancient long-house. Where else would War live? But Death saw ivy growing over the roof. He remembered when War would never have allowed anything like that, and a little worm of worry began to gnaw.
War hung up his helmet as he entered, and once he would have kept it on. And the benches around the fire pit would have been crowded with warriors, and the air would have been thick with beer and sweat.
‘Brought an old friend back, dear,’ he said.
Mrs War was preparing something on the modern black iron kitchen range which, Death saw, had been installed in the fire pit, with shiny pipes extending up to the hole in the roof. She gave Death the kind of nod a wife gives a man whom her husband has, despite previous warnings, unexpectedly brought back from the pub.
‘We’re having rabbit,’ she said, and added in the voice of one who has been put upon and will extract payment later, ‘I’m sure I can make it stretch to three.’
War’s big red face wrinkled. ‘Do I like rabbit?’
‘Yes, dear.’
‘I thought I liked beef.’