Boamund nodded. âAnd then what?' he asked.
âThen we sit down and eat,' Toenail said.
âWhere?'
Toenail looked up at him. âYou what?'
âWhere do we sit?' Boamund repeated. âI mean, I don't want to make a fool of myself by sitting in a dishonourable seat.'
Jesus flaming Christ, thought Toenail to himself, why didn't I just bring sandwiches? âYou sit wherever you like,' he said. âIt's a service station, not the Lord Mayor's Banquet.'
âWhat's aâ?'
âShut up.'
To do him credit, Boamund waited very patiently in the queue. He didn't push or shove or challenge any of the lorry drivers to a duel if they trod on his foot. Toenail's stomach began to unclench slightly.
âNext,' said the woman on the Hot Specials counter. Toenail asked for steak and kidney pudding and was about to move on when he heard Boamund's voice saying:
âI'll have roast swan stuffed with quails, boar's chine in honey, venison black pudding, three partridges done rare and a quart of Rhenish. Please,' he added.
The girl looked at him.
âI said,' Boamund repeated, âI'll have roast swan stuffed with...'
One of the few advantages of being a dwarf is that you can walk away from situations like these without anybody noticing, if necessary by ducking down between people's legs. Very carefully, so as not to spill his gravy, Toenail started to walk...
âToenail!'
He stopped and sighed. Behind Boamund, quite a few people were beginning to get impatient.
âToenail,' Boamund was saying, âyou told me to ask the girl behind the counter for what I wanted to eat, and she's saying all I can have is something called
lassania.'
âYou'll like it,' Toenail croaked. âThey do a very good lasagna here.'
Boamund shook his head. âListen,' he said to the girl, whose face was doing what concrete does, only quicker, âI don't want this yellow muck, right, I want roast swan stuffed with quails...'
The girl said something to Boamund, and the dwarf, whose genes were full of useful information about the habits of insulted knights, instinctively dropped his tray and curled up into a ball on the floor.
But Boamund just said, âSuit yourself then, I'll get it myself,' muttered something or other under his breath, and started to walk away. Against his better judgement, Toenail opened an eye and looked up.
Boamund was still holding his tray. It contained a roast swan, a boar's chine in honey, some peculiar-looking slices of black pudding, three small roast fowl and a large pewter jug.
âHere,' said the girl, âthat's not allowed.'
Boamund stood very still for a moment. âSorry?' he said.
âEating your own food's not allowed,' said the girl.
Toenail felt a boot digging into his ribs. He tried ignoring it.
âToenail, I don't understand this at all. First they don't have any proper food, only
lassania,
and now she says I'm not allowed to eat my food. Does that mean we all have to swap trays or something?'
Toenail stood up. âCome on,' he said, âwe're leaving. Quick.'
âBut...'
âCome on!'
Toenail grabbed Boamund by the sleeve and started to drag him doorwards. Behind them somebody shouted, âHey! Those two haven't paid!'
Boamund stopped dead, and try as he might Toenail couldn't induce him to move. âWhat did you say?' Boamund enquired.
âYou haven't paid for that.'
âBut I didn't get it from you,' Boamund was saying, very patiently, very reasonably. âYour people didn't have anything I wanted so I got something for myself.'
Toenail betted himself that he knew what was coming next. âYou're not allowed,' said the voice, âto eat your own food in here.' Oh good, said Toenail to his feet, I won.
âLook.'
âNo,' said the voice, âyou look.'
Honour, its cultivation and preservation, are at the very root of chivalry. It is thus highly unwise to say something like, âNo, you look,' to a knight, especially if he's hungry and confused. Although Toenail had deliberately averted his head, on the slightly irrational grounds that anything he didn't see he couldn't be blamed for, he didn't need eyes to work out what happened next. The sound of an assistant cafeteria manager being hit with a trayful of roast swan is eloquently self-explanatory.
From under his table, Toenail had a very good view of one section of the fight - roughly from the feet of the participants as far as their knees - and as far as he was concerned that was quite enough for him, thank you very much. You had to say this for the lad, fifteen hundred years asleep on a mountain, you'd think he'd be out of practice, but not a bit of it.
After a while, Toenail could only see one pair of feet, and they were wearing the pair of motorcycle boots he'd bought specially, after measuring the sleeping knight's feet about a week ago. How long ago that seemed!
âToenail!'
âYes?' said the dwarf.
âYou're not particularly hungry, are you?'
Toenail put his head out. âNot really,' he said. âLet's have something when we get there, shall we?'
âGood idea,' Boamund replied. He wiped gravy off his face and grinned sheepishly.
They got to the bike and got it started about four seconds before the police arrived. Fortunately, the police had omitted to bring helicopters with them, so when the bike suddenly lifted off the ground and roared away in the direction of Birmingham there wasn't very much they could do about it, except take its number and arrest a couple of students on a Honda 125 for having a defective brake light.
2
âYes,' Toenail replied.
âAre you sure?' Boamund said. âGive me that street map a second.'
Toenail did so, and Boamund studied it for a while. âLooks like you're right,' he said. âIt just doesn't look like any castle I've ever seen before, that's all.'
Toenail was with him there a hundred per cent. It looked far more like a small, rather unsavoury travel agent's office. Closed, too.
âMaybe it's round the back,' he suggested.
Boamund looked at him, âI think you're missing the point rather,' he said. âThe thing about castles is ...' He paused, trying to choose the right words. âWell,' he said, âyou just don't get castles round the backs of things. It's not the way things are.'
âMaybe it is in Brownhills,' replied the dwarf. âHave you ever been here before?'
âI don't know,' Boamund confessed. âThings have changed a bit since my day.'
âWell,' said the dwarf, âthere you are, then. Maybe the fashions in castle architecture have changed too. The unobtrusive look, you know?'
Boamund frowned and got off the bike. It occurred to Toenail that this was probably one of the best opportunities he was going to get for quite some time to jump on the bike, gun the engine and get the hell out of here before something really horrible happened to him; but he didn't, somehow. What he told himself was that the bike wouldn't start, and that knights took a dim view of attempted desertion. The truth of the matter was that his dwarfish genes wouldn't let him. Stand By Your Knight, the old dwarf song goes.
Boamund was knocking on the door. âAnybody home?' he called.
Silence. Boamund tried again, with the air of a man who knows that the proper way to do this would be to sound a slug-horn, if only he had such a thing about his person. Still nothing.
âIt must be the wrong place,' Toenail said. âLook, let's just go away somewhere and think it over, shall we?'
Boamund shook his head. âNo,' he said. âI think this is the right place after all. Look.'
He pointed at something, and Toenail stood on tiptoe and looked. He could see nothing. He said so.
âThere,' Boamund said, âcan't you see, on the doorframe, very faint but it's there, definitely.'
Toenail squinted. There was, he had to admit, the faintest possible pattern or design, crudely scratched on the paintwork. He stared at it for a while, until his imagination got him thinking that it could be mistaken for a bunch of roses, their petals intertwined. âOh yes,' he said. âWhat's that, then?'
âIt's a waymark,' Boamund replied. âPart of the Old High Symbolism. Must mean that there are knights here.'
âIs that what it means, then?' Toenail demanded.
âStrictly speaking, no,' Boamund replied. âWhat it actually means is, “No insurance salesmen or Jehovah's Witnesses; beware of the dog.” But reading between the lines ... Here, what's this?'
âAnother one?'
âMaybe,' Boamund muttered. âLet's have a look.' He rubbed away a dried-on pigeon dropping, scrutinised the doorpost carefully and then chuckled to himself. âIt's definitely a waymark,' he said. âLook.'
âThis time,' Toenail said, âI'm going to have to take your word for it.'
âIt's the ancient character designed to let bailiffs know that you've moved,' Boamund observed. âWe call it the Great Self-Defeating Pentagram. This is the right place, I reckon.' He thumped on the door so hard that Toenail reckoned he could feel it wince, and then called out very loudly in what Toenail would ordinarily have guessed was Bulgarian.
Several seconds of complete silence; and then a window above their heads ground open.
âWe're closed,' said the voice. âGo away.'
Boamund was staring, open-mouthed. âBedders!' he yelled out joyfully, and waved. âBedders, it's me.'
Toenail looked up at the man in the window; a round-faced, bald head with a big red nose. âBo?' it replied, and its tone of voice implied that this was better than pink elephants or spiders climbing the wallpaper, but still uncalled for. âIt can't be.'
âBedders!' Boamund repeated rapturously. âCome and open this door before I kick it in!'
This, Toenail surmised, was entirely consistent with what he knew of the way knights talked to each other. Apparently, under the laws of chivalry, the way you expressed warm sentiments of friendship and goodwill to another knight was to challenge him to put on all his armour, be knocked off his horse, and get his head bashed in with a fifteen-pound mace.
âYou touch that door,' the head replied, âand I'll break both your legs.' An expert on courtly repartee would immediately have recognised this as being roughly equivalent to our, âGeorge, you old bastard, how the devil are you!', but Toenail decided to hide behind the bike, just in case.
âYou and whose army, you drunken ponce?' Boamund replied tenderly. The head grinned.
âStay right there,' he said, and the window slammed.
Boamund turned round.
âWhat are you doing down there?' he asked.
âHiding,' said a voice from behind the bike's rear wheel. âWhat does it look like I'mâ?'
âYou don't want to take any notice of old Beddersâthat's Sir Bedevere to you,' Boamund replied. âSoft as porridge, old Bedders. Here, quick, where's that sword?'
He rummaged around in the luggage, and when the door opened (to reveal a huge-looking figure completely covered in steel, Toenail couldn't help noticing) he had found the sword and the shield and had put his crash helmet back on. For his part, Toenail, having assessed the various options available to him, jumped into the bike's left-hand pannier and pulled the lid down over his head. There are times when it feels good to be small.
âHa,' he heard someone saying. âAbide, false knight, for I will have ado with you.' Toenail shuddered and closed his eyes.
âI will well,' said the other idiot. âKeep thee then from me.'
Then there was a noise like a multiple pile-up, followed by the inevitable sound of something metal, as if it might be a hub-cap, wheeling along the ground, spinning and then falling over with a clang. And then shouts of boisterous laughter.
And then someone pulled open the lid of the pannier and extracted Toenail by the collar of his jacket.
âToenail,' Boamund was saying, âmeet Sir Bedevere. Bedders, this is my dwarf, Toenail.'
âPleased to meet you, Toenail,' said the armoured lunatic. By the looks of it, the thing that had come off and rolled about on the floor must have been his helmet, since he was bareheaded and bleeding from a cut over his left eye. âWell, then,' said Sir Bedevere, âyou'd better come in. The others,' he added, âare all out, and it's muggins' turn to do the kitchen floor again.' A thought occurred to him. âHang on,' he said, brightening, âyour dwarf can do it, can't he?'