Authors: Colin Dunne
It certainly isn't clear now.'
He shrugged and dabbed at his face with the hankie. 'We're offering you rather a splendid opportunity, Mr Craven.'
'Are you?'
'I think so. You could have the chance to give history a bit of a nudge in the right direction. Tempting, don't you think?'
I'd never seen myself as a history-nudger. Personally, I had every confidence that the professionals in charge of our affairs could find the shortest route to Armageddon without any help from me.
'Hang on,' I said, doing a recap to try to straighten it out in my mind. 'You want me to go to Iceland as a sort of temporary diplomat ...'
'Dear me, no. No, no, no.' He shook his head so quickly that his moustache nearly flew off. 'For us, you see, the whole attraction of employing someone like yourself is that you are not traceable. To us, of course.'
For a moment I had a chilling vision of myself in a mortuary drawer with a question mark on the tag tied to my toe. He must have picked up my reaction because he quickly went on: 'What I mean is that no one will know you're working for us.'
'Ah,' I said, wagging a finger at his beaming face. 'If you're in the line of work I think you're in, Mr Batty, shouldn't you be coming striding out of the sea half-naked with a bloody big knife strapped to your sunburned thigh?'
He straightened in his chair. 'Should I? Why ever do you say that?'
'Ursula Andress did.'
A crafty little smile twisted his lips. 'Really? Was she a civil servant too, Mr Craven?'
'Mr Batty,' I said. 'I do believe you're a bit of a tease.'
3
Just for a minute there, I wasn't sure who was taking the mickey out of who. Or whom, as we diurnalists like to say. By way of celebrating this new rapport, Mr Batty agreed to risk a mug of tea as he told me about his plans for my future.
Not all that surprisingly, I suppose, he had it all worked out. They- his department, presumably- would arrange for one of the Fleet Street newspapers to send me to Iceland on a job. That should give me enough justification to go round asking questions and generally making a nuisance of myself.
'Which one?' I offered him a turn with the sugar-bag containing a damp spoon. He declined. Our new rapport wasn't that good.
'One of the pops, we thought,' he replied. 'We have a little pull with them, and they'd be rather fun to work for, wouldn't you say?'
I worked mostly for magazines and the heavies. I'd steered clear of the tabloids ever since they'd taken to printing fiction. Still, this wasn't really work, was it?
'Of course, we'd cover your basic costs and I think we could arrange to put, say, five hundred in your bank account now.'
'That should bring my early retirement forward a couple of seconds.'
'It's all taxpayers' money, Mr Craven,' he said, with some indignation. 'We do have to spend it responsibly. Do you know, I'm convinced that tea tastes much better out of a mug like this, but my secretary won't hear of it.'
I shook my head at him. 'Great mistake, getting physically involved with your secretary.'
'I do assure you ... let me make it clear immed ... ah, you're joking again I do believe, Mr Craven.'
'Caught me, Mr Batty. Tell me one thing- how can you be sure I won't nudge history in the wrong direction?'
'Excellent point.' He looked at me as, with one stiffened finger, he stroked his sad moustache as though he expected it to bolt for cover down his throat. 'Yes, excellent question. You see, we rather assume that you have the usual sort of loyalty to your country.'
'You could be making a mistake.'
The moustache twitched into a small smile. 'I don't think so.'
'Well.' I looked around my crumbling cabin of an office. 'It's only fair to tell you that I don't feel any sentimental bond to a particular acreage just because that's where my parents succumbed to an attack of lust.'
He went on smiling.
'If they'd had the same attack in the South Seas, we might be having this conversation on the beach over a glass of fresh coconut juice. If you take my point.
His smile still hadn't shifted.
'Look, let me put it this way. My sole concern is to get this admittedly pathetic little body through from breakfast to bedtime each day with minimum damage. That's my only serious commitment to a philosophical ideal.'
'But you don't have any loyalties which might, shall we say, conflict. It was more of a statement than a question and I realised, foolishly, that of course he would've had me checked out, even for this errand-boy sort of job.
'Not really.'
He made a brave try at drinking his tea and leaned forward to slide the mug on to my desk. 'Very fair of you to try to explain your position. These days, I think we're inclined to trust someone with your sort of healthy cynicism rather than an old fashioned patriot. And you do have the incentive of wishing to see that your friend Solrun makes the right decision. Oh, no, Mr Craven. We've made the right choice. You must trust us to do that.'
'In that case .. .'
He was halfway out of the door before I realised what I'd let myself in for.
'One thing,' I said, before he vanished down the stairs. 'This job for the paper - will it be real or is it just ... window dressing?'
Well, I couldn't say 'cover', could I? Normal people don't go round talking about cover.
'Oh, yes, definitely. We shall see that it's put into their minds to give you a commission up there. You will have to do it, I'm afraid, but no doubt you will be generously paid for it.' He gave my arm a sympathetic pat. 'From what little I've seen of the popular papers, it shouldn't be anything too intellectually demanding. You'll cope, Mr Craven, you'll cope.'
The last I heard of him was a vast sneeze echoing up the stairs. I made another pot of tea and watched the gold dust dance in the one beam of sunlight I was permitted by city by laws.
That was when it struck me. However they dressed it up in homely jargon, the British Government were employing me - at least, indirectly- to go up to Iceland to see what Solrun was getting up to. And, presumably, to do something about it. That made me a spy. Okay, only Acting, Temporary, and Without Pension Rights, but I was still a spy. I looked around my broken-down office. At least I had one qualification - the ribbon on my typewriter was so worn I could use it as invisible ink.
But exactly what did they expect me to do about it? That was the big puzzle. If Batty had checked me out, which he must've done, then he'd know that I wouldn't be likely to have a deep sense of historic continuity. You don't have a lot of that if you haven't got a mum or dad, like me.
No man is an island? You want to bet? This one is. A private island, and I don't allow picnickers either.
4
Shurring shurring shurring shurring shurring. Shurring shurring. Shurring shurring shurring shurring shurring shurring.
Am I doing this properly? It seems so stupid sitting bolt upright in the office saying one word over and over again to myself. Anyway, here goes. In threes this time.
Shurring shurring shurring. Shurring shurring shurring. Shurring shurring shurring.
Am I meditating yet? I don't feel as though I am. On the other hand, the night I fell down three flights of stairs I didn't feel as though I was drunk. A few more. In pairs this time.
Shurring shurring. Shurring shurring. Shurring shurring. Just keep saying the mantrap - sorry, mantra-so the teacher said at the class, and my system would sink into the resting state and my mind would be empty of thoughts. Right. Is the mind empty? Whoops, no, there's a sneaky little thought appertaining to an unpaid gas bill. And another about picking up my laundry. I chase those two off and in slips another thought about that bendy-looking blonde in the office down stairs.
Oh, hell, shuring, shurr-bloody-ing, and my mind is wriggling like an ant hill with unauthorised thoughts. The astral plane of selflessness which lies beyond the void didn't seem to have any membership vacancies at the moment.
Shurring shurring ... I'm not doing all that again. Then I realised. It was the phone.
'Craven?'
'Speaking.'
"Ere. I like this idea you've put up for a feature piece in Iceland.'
Suddenly I knew who it was. Batty hadn't been kidding when he said one of the pop papers. The editor didn't bother to introduce himself because he assumed everyone knew him. He was right. Throughout the newspaper business, he was known as Grimm, on account of the fact that his paper consisted almost entirely of fairy tales. He was a frenzied young northerner who'd found- that the streets of London were paved with gold, so long as you didn't mind wading through the sewers first.
'Idea?'
'Yeah, this memo you sent. Secrets of the Sexy Eskies. Brilliant. You're on.'
'Good. I mean, great. Secrets of the what?'
'Sexy Eskies. That's my headline. So you work to that, right?'
I was relieved to hear the headline was his. Even the Foreign Office, with its fathomless resources, couldn't have counter feited such a classic as that. Even as I was listening to him, I could see the problems of actually putting this into operation.
'So, you get your interview with this Miss Iceland lass- what she does, who with, every pant and wriggle- and we're there. Like I say, Secrets of the Sexy Eskies.'
'Right. Terrific. Just one thing.'
'What?' He sounded irritated. Just one thing sounded one too many for him.
'Strictly speaking, Icelanders aren't Eskimos. Very, very strictly speaking, of course.'
His sigh burned up a few hundred yards of telephone wire.
'Listen. I shouldn't have to explain this to you,' he said, in the tones of one who bears a heavy burden through life. 'How it works is this. Maybe they are Eskimos. Maybe they're not Eskimos. Who can say? But if I think they're Eskimos then our readers will think they're Eskimos, and if our readers think they're Eskimos, then bloody Eskimos they are. Got it?'
'Got it.'
'Thank God. Tell you what,' he began, in a more generous tone, 'I've seen your stuff around. It's not all crap, you know.'
'I'm glad to hear that.'
'No, fair does, it's not. What I don't understand is why you haven't been on to me before.'
'I was waiting,' I said, marvelling as I heard the unplanned words slip through my lips, 'for a really big one.'
'Love it!' he enthused. 'That's what this business wants - commitment, heart, guts. There's big bucks in this, Craven. Get on your way. Today. Secrets of the Sexy Eskies, eh? Ring in. Ciao.'
I sat there for a couple of minutes looking at the phone and wondering if my attempts at meditation had somehow flung this nightmare figure into my imagination. But no, I knew it wasn't. That was Grimm all right.
It was my only experience of him first-hand, and I must say my immediate reaction was to start a new life in Paraguay
Yonoder a false name. Still, I wasn't really working for him, was I? I don't know why I bothered dragging my conscience in foran overhaul like that. All I needed to do was to concentrate on the prospect of seeing Solrun again and I could've rationalised the Crucifixion.
One phone call to Icelandair did the lot. They put me on the evening flight, promised to book me a room with Hulda Gudmundsdottir - my, we were back in opera-land, weren't we? - and they also promised to notify the information office where Solrun worked that I was on my way. After that, of course, it was up to her.
Then I rang Sally's convent school near Guildford where
eventually I battered my way past the nuns' chorus and got to speak to my daughter. Speak? Did I say speak? Got to listen to her. In no time at all I was apprised of the facts that Natasha had quarrelled with Fiona and she and Henrietta weren't going to bother with them any more, not if they were going to have a pash on that hateful Rowena.
Of course, it all sounded like birdsong to me.
My ex-wife sent her to the convent because they wore boaters in the summer. I think she believed that straw had miracle properties when placed in close proximity to the brain. I made a note to buy myself a straw hat sometime.
I thought of trying the old shurring shurring again, but decided against. It didn't seem to be taking with me. Every time I emptied my mind of the stresses and worries that were poisoning my system (so the book said), someone sneaked up with another lorry-load.
Instead, I sauntered up to the Cheshire Cheese where - gurus please note- I reached astral planes of pure thoughtless serenity on exactly three pints of Marston's best bitter.
5
At first sight you might've thought the flight was a reunion for brother-and-sister twins of a mature age.
People who fly south want to get things: like brown, drunk and laid. People who fly north want to look: they want to look at flowers and birds and scenery, and, as a rule, they stay white, sober and unlaid. They fly north in matching pairs, white haired, ruddy-faced, retired teachers, husbands and wives who have grown alike over the years.
The flight was full of them. All wearing shirts made from that stuff Scotsmen use for kilts. If you'd asked a question about Jurassic rock formation, every hand in the place would have been raised.
I ate what looked like a bottled brain. It was a herring which, if not actually soused, had certainly stopped off for a couple. Raw and tangy, it tasted delicious. Icelandair haven't yet mastered the art of making all their food taste like wartime soap: how they get a licence beats me.