A Thursday Next Digital Collection: Novels 1-5 (64 page)

BOOK: A Thursday Next Digital Collection: Novels 1-5
9.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Good,” said the Bellman, signing a docket and tearing it off. “Take this to Wemmick in stores.”

He left us and called to Foyle and the Red Queen about a missing person named Cass in
Silas Marner.

“Did you understand any of that?” asked Miss Havisham.

“Not really.”

“Good!” smiled Miss Havisham. “Confused is
exactly
how all cadets to Jurisfiction should enter their first assignment!”

26.
Assignment One: Bloophole Filled in
Great Expectations

Bloophole:
Term used to describe a narrative hole by the author that renders his/her work seemingly impossible. An unguarded bloophole may not cause damage for millions of readings, but then, quite suddenly and catastrophically, the book may unravel itself in a very dramatic fashion. Hence the Jurisfiction saying “A switch in a line can save a lot of time.”

TextMarker:
An emergency device that outwardly resembles a flare pistol. Designed by the Jurisfiction Design & Technology department, the TextMarker allows a trapped PRO to “mark” the text of the book they are within using a predesignated code of bold, italics, underlining, etc., unique to the agent. Another agent may then jump in at the right page to effect a rescue. Works well as long as the rescuer is looking for the signal.

UNITARY AUTHORITY OF WARRINGTON CAT
,
The Jurisfiction Guide to the Great Library
(glossary)

M
ISS
H
AVISHAM
had dispatched me to get some tea and meet her back at her desk, so I walked across to the refreshments.

“Good evening, Miss Next,” said a well-dressed young man in plus fours and a sports jacket. He had a well-trimmed mustache and a monocle screwed into his eye; he smiled and offered me his hand to shake. “Vernham Deane, resident cad of
The Squire of High Potternews
, D. Farquitt, 246 pages, softcover £3.99.”

I shook his hand.

“I know what you're thinking,” he said sadly. “No one thinks much of Daphne Farquitt, but she sells a lot of books and she's always been pretty good to me—apart from the chapter where I ravish the serving girl at Potternews Hall and then callously have her turned from the house. I didn't want to, believe me.”

He looked at me with the same earnestness that Mrs. Dashwood had exhibited when explaining
her
actions in
Sense and Sensibility.
It sounded as though a preordained life could be something of a nuisance.

“I've not read the book,” I told him untruthfully, unwilling to get embroiled in Farquitt plot intricacies—I could be stuck here for days.

“Ah!” he said with some relief, then added: “You have a good teacher in Miss Havisham. Solid and dependable, but a stickler for rules. There are many shortcuts here that the more mature members either frown upon or have no knowledge of; will you permit me to show you around some time?”

I was touched by the courtesy.

“Thank you, Mr. Deane—I accept.”

“Vern,” he said. “Call me Vern. Listen, don't rely too heavily on the ISBN numbers. The Bellman's a bit of a technophile and although the ISBN Positioning System might
seem
to have its attractions, I should keep one of Bradshaw's maps with you as a backup at all times.”

“I'll bear that in mind, Vern, thanks.”

“And don't worry about old Harris. His bark is a lot worse than his bite. He looks down on me because I'm from a racy potboiler, but listen—I can hold my own against him any day!”

He poured some tea for us both before continuing.

“He was trained during the days when cadets were cast into
A Pilgrim's Progress
and told to make their own way out. He thinks all us young 'uns are soft as soap. Don't you, Tweed?”

He turned to meet my detractor.

Harris Tweed stood by with an empty coffee cup.

“What are you blathering about, Deane?” he asked, scowling like thunder.

“I was telling Miss Next here that you think we're all a bit soft.”

Harris took a step closer, glared at Deane and then fixed me with his dark brown eyes. He was about fifty, graying, and had the sort of face that looked as though the skin had been measured upon a skull three sizes smaller before fitment.

“Has Havisham mentioned the Well of Lost Plots to you?” he asked.

“The Cat mentioned it. Unpublished books, I think he said.”

“Not
just
unpublished. The Well of Lost Plots is where vague ideas ferment into sketchy plans. This is the Notion Nursery. The Word Womb. Go down there and you'll see plot outlines coalescing on the shelves like so many primordial life forms. The spirits of roughly sketched characters flit about the corridors in search of plot and dialogue before they are woven into the story. If they get lucky, the book finds a publisher and rises into the Great Library above.”

“And if they're unlucky?”

“They stay in the basement. But there's more. Below the Well of Lost Plots is
another
basement. Subbasement twenty-seven. No one talks of it much. It's where deleted characters, poor plot devices, half-baked ideas and corrupt Jurisfiction agents go to spend a painful eternity. Just remember that.”

I was stunned, so said nothing. Tweed glared at Deane, scowled at me, filled up his coffee cup and left. As soon as he was out of earshot, Vernham turned to me and said: “Old wives' tales. There's no such thing as basement twenty-seven.”

“Sort of like using the Jabberwock to frighten children, yes?”

“Well, not really,” replied Deane thoughtfully, “because there
is
a Jabberwock. Frightfully nice fellow—good at fly-fishing and plays the bongos. I'll introduce you sometime.”

I heard Miss Havisham calling my name.

“I'd better go,” I told him.

Vern looked at his watch.

“Of course. Goodness, is that the time? Well, hey-ho, see you about!”

Despite Vern's assurances about Harris Tweed's threats I still felt uneasy. Was jumping into a copy of Poe from my side enough of a misdemeanor to attract Tweed's ire? And how much training would I need before I could even
attempt
to rescue Jack Schitt? I returned to Miss Havisham deep in thought about Jurisfiction and Landen and bookjumping. I noticed her desk was as far from the Red Queen's as one could get and laid her tea in front of her.

“What do you know about subbasement twenty-seven?” I asked her.

“Old wives' tales,” replied Havisham, concentrating on the report she was filing. “One of the other PROs trying to frighten you?”

“Sort of.”

I looked around while Miss Havisham busied herself. There seemed to be a lot of activity in the room; PROs melted in and out of the air around me with the Bellman moving around, reading instructions from his clipboard. My eyes alighted on a shiny horn that was connected to a polished wood-and-brass device on the desk by a flexible copper tube. It reminded me of a very old form of gramophone—something that Thomas Edison might have come up with.

Miss Havisham looked up, saw I was trying to read the instructions on the brass plaque and said: “It's a footnoterphone. We use them to communicate. Book-to-book or external calls, their value is incalculable. Try it out if you wish.”

I took the horn and looked inside. There was a cork plug pushed into the end attached to a short chain. I looked at Miss Havisham.

“Just give the title of the book, page, character, and if you really want to be specific, line and word.”

“As simple as that?”

“As simple as that.”

I pulled out the plug and heard a voice say: “Operator services. Can I help you?”

“Oh! yes—er, book-to-book, please.” I thought of a novel I had been reading recently and chose a page and line at random. “
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night,
page 156, line four.”

“Trying to connect you. Thank you for using FNP Communications.”

There were a few clicking noises and I heard a man's voice saying: “. . .
and our hearts, though stout and brave, still like muffled
 . . .”

The operator came back on the line.

“I'm sorry, we had a crossed line. You are through now, caller. Thank you for using FNP Communications.”

Now all I could hear was the low murmur of conversation above the sound of engines of a ship. At a loss to know what to say I just gabbled: “Antonio?”

There was the sound of a confused voice, and I hurriedly replaced the plug.

“You'll get the hang of it,” said Havisham kindly, putting her report down. “Paperwork! My goodness. Come along, we've got to visit Wemmick in the stores. I like him, so
you'll
like him. I won't expect you to do much on this first assignment—just stay close to me and observe. Finished your tea? We're off!”

I hadn't, of course, but Miss Havisham grabbed my elbow and before I knew it we were back in the huge entrance lobby near the Boojumorial. Our footsteps rang out on the polished
floor as we crossed to one side of the vestibule, where a small counter not more than six feet wide was set into the deep red marble wall. A battered notice told us to take a number and we would be called.

“Rank must have its privileges!” cried Miss Havisham gaily as she walked to the front of the queue. A few of the Jurisfiction agents looked up, but most were too busy swotting up on their passnotes, cramming for their impending destinations.

Harris Tweed was in front of us, kitting up for his trip into
The Lost World.
On the counter before him there was a complete safari suit, knapsack, binoculars and revolver.

“—and one Rigby .416 sporting rifle, plus sixty rounds of ammunition.”

The storekeeper laid a mahogany rifle box on the counter and shook his head sadly.

“Are you
sure
you wouldn't prefer an M-16? A charging stegosaurus can take some stopping, I'll be bound.”

“An M-16 would be sure to raise suspicions, Mr. Wemmick. Besides, I'm a bit of a traditionalist at heart.”

Mr. Wemmick sighed, shook his head and handed the clipboard to Tweed for him to sign. Harris grunted his thanks to Mr. Wemmick, signed the top copy, had the docket stamped and returned to him before he gathered up his possessions, nodded respectfully at Miss Havisham, ignored me and then murmured, “. . .
long, dark, wood-paneled corridor lined with bookshelves
 . . .” before vanishing.

“Good day, Miss Havisham!” said Mr. Wemmick politely as soon as we stepped up. “And how are we this day?”

“In health, I think, Mr. Wemmick. Is Mr. Jaggers quite well?”

“Quite well to my way of thinking, I should say, Miss Havisham, quite well.”

“This is Miss Next, Mr. Wemmick. She has joined us recently.”

“Delighted!” remarked Mr. Wemmick, who looked every bit the way he was described in
Great Expectations.
That is to say, he was short, had a slightly pockmarked face, and had been that way for about forty years.

“Where are you two bound?”

“Home!” said Miss Havisham, laying the docket on the counter.

Mr. Wemmick picked up the piece of paper and looked at it for a moment before disappearing into the storeroom and rummaging noisily.

“The stores are indispensable for our purposes, Thursday. Wemmick quite literally writes his own inventory. It all has to be signed for and returned, of course, but there is very little that he doesn't have. Isn't that so, Mr. Wemmick?”

“Exactly so!” came a voice from behind a large pile of Turkish costumes and a realistic rubber bison.

“By the way, can you swim?” asked Miss Havisham.

“Yes.”

Mr. Wemmick returned with a small pile of items.

“Life vests—life preserving, for the purpose of—two. Rope— in case of trouble—one. Life belt—to assist Magwitch buoyancy— one. Cash—for incidental expenses—ten shillings and fourpence. Cloak—for disguising said agents Next and Havisham, heavy-duty, black—two. Packed supper—two. Sign here.”

Miss Havisham picked up the pen and paused before signing.

“We'll need my boat, Mr. Wemmick,” she said lowering her voice.

“I'll footnoterphone ahead, Miss H,” said Wemmick, winking broadly. “You'll find it on the jetty.”

“For a man you are not bad at all, Mr. Wemmick!” said Miss Havisham. “Thursday, gather up the equipment!”

I picked up the heavy canvas bag.

“Dickens
is
within walking distance,” explained Havisham,
“but it's better practice for you if you jump us straight there— there are over fifty thousand miles of shelf space.”

“Ah—okay, I know how to do that,” I muttered, putting down the bag, taking out my travel book and flicking to the passage about the library.

“Hold on to me as you jump, and think
Dickens
as you read.”

So I did, and within a trice we were at the right place in the library.

“How was that?” I asked, quite proudly.

“Not bad,” said Havisham. “But you forgot the bag.”

“Sorry.”

“I'll wait while you get it.”

So I read myself back to the lobby, retrieved the bag to a few friendly jibes from Deane, and returned—but by accident to where a series of adventure books for plucky girls by Charles
Pickens
were stored. I sighed, read the library passage again and was soon with Miss Havisham.

Other books

Unleashed by N., Brittney
The Trap by Michael Grant
Tomorrow River by Lesley Kagen
The Night Shifters by Emily Devenport
Eve Vaughn by The Factory
Airtight by David Rosenfelt
The Tutor by Peter Abrahams
THE WAR BRIDE CLUB by LANE, SORAYA