âI think it needs thinking about.'
Another silence; during which Staff noticed that the burning thrones they sat on, as a mark of their superior executive status, didn't burn any more. They just glowed intermittently and hummed.
âHave you thought yet?' he enquired.
âNot yet, no.'
âFine,' Staff replied. âYou take your time.' He crossed his legs and started to doodle ostentatiously.
âWhy don't we use the usual procedure?' asked a voice from the other end of the table.
âBecause . . .' Staff started to say, but checked himself. There were times when his paranoia slipped the lead and got mixed up with his angst, when he sincerely believed that Finance and General Purposes was a management plant, deliberately seeded on to this committee to make sure that nothing ever got done. Since it was very probably true he invariably dismissed the idea from his mind; it is not just mankind who cannot bear too much reality. âBecause,' he went on, âthere's three feet of moss growing in the usual channels and something's got to be done.'
âOh, we're all agreed on
that
,' Branch said. âNo question about it,
something
's got to be done. On the other
hand, we don't want to rush into something without having worked it carefully through. I mean. . .' He made a slight but expressive gesture and went back to impersonating a doorstop. Staff took a grip on himself, straining something in his integrity, and tried to sound conciliatory.
âAll right, then,' he said, âwhat about an agency? I gather they're very good at this sort of thing. You know, head-hunting. '
âWhich agency had you in mind?' said Personnel.
âLook,' said Staff, âthis is supposed to be an ideas session, right? We're supposed to be a think tank, bouncing ideas off each other. Has anybody got any ideas at all?'
There was a slightly embarrassed pause; and then Personnel, judging his timing to perfection, smiled and cleared his throat.
âI've got an idea,' he said. âI've got an idea that this needs thinking through carefully.'
âMe too,' said Branch. âLooking at it in the round, I mean.'
âI think,' said Finance and General Purposes, âthat we should go through the established procedure.'
Staff closed his eyes. âGood God, Norman,' he said to the ceiling, âwhat an absolute stroke of genius. Yes, let's all do that, shall we? Well, thank you very much for your time, gentlemen. I honestly believe we've all made very real progress today. Same time next week then?'
Instead of going back to the main building, Staff turned left down the corridor, walked briskly on past the post room, turned right by the file store and pressed the button for the lift. Two minutes later, he swore at the lift-shaft and started to climb the seventeen flights of stairs that led to the DA's office.
âI'll show the bastards,' he muttered, rather breathlessly. âJust for once, I'll damn well
show
the . . .'
The further up he went the dustier it got. There was something about the decor, something very subtle which you couldn't put your finger on, that suggested that nobody had been this way in a very long time, and that there was probably a very good reason for that. Perhaps, Staff said to himself, it's the fact that all the treads on this staircase are rotted half through.
At last, breathless and sweating, he found himself at the top of the building. It was dark here (no light bulb), and cold, and ever so slightly spooky. It was
years
since he'd been up this far. It was a fair bet that there was nobody here any more.
In front of him there was a glass door so grimy that he had to wipe it with his sleeve before he could read the lettering on it. But there was a light behind it, implying the presence of sentient life. That, as far as Staff was concerned, would make a pleasant change. He screwed up his eyes and read the inscription on the window.
Â
D. GANGER
Â
it said, and in smaller letters underneath:
Â
DEVIL'S ADVOCATE
Â
âOh well,' said Staff to himself, repressing a shudder, âI'm here now.'
He knocked smartly on the door and turned the handle.
Â
âTry a bit of silver paper and some gunk,' said the Technical Adviser into the receiver.
The voice at the other end crackled at him. âWill that work?' it enquired.
âDunno.' The Technical Adviser leaned back in his chair and put a peppermint in his mouth. âMight do.'
âLook,' said the crackle. âI've got a bloody great disc of helium broken down over East Africa. Things are starting to get burnt. Suggest something.'
âNot my fault,' replied the Technical Adviser automatically. âI told 'em at Depot it needed a whole new gearbox, but would they listen? Nah.' He crunched the peppermint into the mouthpiece, sending a noise like the end of the world down the wire. âLook,' he said, after he had cleared the shrapnel off the roof of his mouth, âtell you what I'll do for you. I'll send out Maintenance with the van. They'll have you back on the road again, no worries.'
The crackle reminded him by way of reply that the Maintenance Unit had been disbanded two years ago as part of the cutbacks programme, and its staff reassigned to Oceans. âWhat about the backup team?' it suggested.
âNice idea,' replied the Technical Adviser, thumbing through a roster. âTrouble is, they're down at the Social Club at Depot fixing a jammed pool table.You want them, you got to fill in a Yellow at least forty-eight hours in advance.'
âThen what do you suggest?'
âYou could get out and push.'
The crackle considered this, gave the Technical Officer some advice of an intimate nature, and disconnected itself.
The fish in Lake Victoria were finding that the ceiling was rather nearer than usual.
Â
âCome in.'
Rather to Staff 's surprise, the door opened easily. He blinked.
It wasn't quite the way he'd expected it to be. For one thing, it was clean. Cleaner, in fact, than the rest of the building. It was newly decorated. In one corner there was a highly advanced fax machine, flickering quietly, bringing
up its lunch, while in the other stood a computer terminal which looked like the sort of thing George Lucas would have dreamed up if possessed by devils. There was also, Staff noticed, a substantial potted plant. Real, not plastic.
âIt's because we're separately funded,' said a voice behind him. âThe benefits of decentralisation and all that. You're Chief of Staff, aren't you?'
The figure standing behind him was almost as disconcerting as the environment. It looked young, vibrant, full of energy. More amazing still, it looked like it was capable of enjoying itself.
âYou're . . .' Staff said. The figure grinned.
âMy name's Ganger. We haven't actually met, but it's my job to know things.'
By way of a disorienting remark, said Staff's soul to any part of his brain that happened to be listening, that's got to be in the running with
Are you sure you're feeling all right?
and
Excuse me, there's a bomb inside this banana
. Throwing people off balance was probably part of the job, too. Staff forced himself to relax.
âSorry to barge in like this,' he said, âbut have you got a moment?'
Ganger nodded. âSure,' he said. âCarol, I'll be engaged in the back office. Anyone calls, take a message.'
Staff's head swivelled like a windmill and he caught sight of a blonde head between two earphones. Laid-back nonchalance is all very well but there are limits.
âYou don't mean to say,' he whispered, âyou've actually got a
secretary
?'
âTwo,' Ganger replied, and Staff gave up the struggle. This was the sort of man who had a My-other-car's-a-Porsche sticker in the back window of his Maserati. âCome with me. Coffee?'
Staff made a little noise without opening his lips. âI suppose your secretary will bring it through to us?'
Ganger raised an eyebrow. âWell, yes,' he said.
âOne of your two secretaries?'
âThat's it. If that's all right with you, that is.'
âThat's fine,' said Staff. âI think I've come to the right place.'
It seemed like a very long walk through to the back office, until Staff realised that it was the effort of walking through the carpet. You could easily lose a Mayan city in the pile and never know it.
âSo what can we do for you?' Ganger said, waving his arm at a chair. Staff looked at him carefully. Perhaps it was an invitation to sit on it, but it seemed unlikely. It had the appearance of the sort of thing you pay money just to look at.
âSit down,' said Ganger, âplease. We don't stand on ceremony here.'
Maybe not, but you sure as hell sit on luxury. Staff sat back, panicked for a moment until he got his bearings again, and cleared his mind.
âActually,' he began to say, âall it was . . .'
His lips froze. Ganger followed his line of sight and raised an eyebrow.
âIt's a photocopier,' he said. âYou know, you put pieces of paper in one end . . .'
âI'm sorry,' Staff muttered. âLike I was saying, I'm in a bit of a quandary, and I thought, you know, a fresh angle on the problem . . .'
Ganger nodded. âI know,' he said. âDo you advertise or do you go to an agency? Good question.'
âLook . . .' Staff tried to sit up, but the chair wouldn't let him. He struggled. Self-esteem wasn't the most significant part of his personality, but he was damned if he was going to end his career by slipping down the back of a chair.
âHow do I know all this?' Ganger said. âSimple. It's my
job.' He paused, then smiled gently. âTry straightening your back,' he said. âIt'll push you forward out of the cushion.'
Staff did so, then he scowled. âYou're a . . .'
âNo, I'm not, actually,' Ganger replied. âIt's possible to read mortal minds, of course, but not ours. Jamming devices, you know. Really, it's just intuition and psychology.'
âOh.'
âAnd microphones too, of course.'
âAh.'
The door opened, and a female person brought in a tray with two cups of coffee. With saucers. Saucers that matched. I'd honestly believe I'd died and gone to heaven, thought Staff . . .
âOnly that's not possible in the circumstances,' Ganger said, and laughed politely. âThank you, I'm flattered. All it takes really is good taste and careful management.'
âAnd separate funding.'
âThat helps, certainly.' Ganger looked at him over his cup. âMy money's on an agency.'
âReally?'
Ganger nodded. âEvery time,' he said. âSaves time, and in the long run money. Neither of which, if I'm right, you've got a great deal of.'
Staff tried unsuccessfully to balance his saucer on his knee, but the chair seemed to be breathing. âAll right,' he said. âAnd what do I tell the rest of the committee?'
Ganger looked surprised: probably a whole new experience . . .
âNot at all,' he said abruptly. âThings surprise me all the time. Who gives a toss what the committee thinks? Anyway,' he added, âif you're at all bothered about it, don't tell them.'
âBut I've got to tell . . .'
âWhy?'
Staff was shocked; it was like being asked to justify breathing. Then the penny dropped. Different rules . . .
âYou tell me,' he said.
TWO
Â
Â
Â
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J
ane was not a naturally discontented person; or at least, that was what she'd always led herself to believe. It was just that there were certain things that she found hard to put up with. These things tended to change their shape depending on circumstances, just as clouds can sometimes be great fluffy dragons and sometimes wisps of low-quality cotton wool; sometimes it would be the plight of famine victims, sometimes it was the incredibly feckless way the stationery supplies were managed at work, and sometimes - quite often, and in point of fact, right now - it was the punctuality of the 42A bus that really managed to get to her. If there was a common factor, it was probably sloppiness.
The weather could do with sorting, too.
The British Nation, she said to herself, and its unique relationship with water: we either sail over it or stand under it. It took the Chinese, though, to invent the umbrella.
Since the 42A had patently been ambushed by the Hole in the Wall Gang, set on fire and abandoned somewhere further up the line, she decided to walk the mile from
the office to the station. She splashed resolutely up the road, trying to avoid the larger puddles and speculating as to whether ditching fins and growing legs had been the evolutionary breakthrough everyone reckoned it was. She was coming to the conclusion that the really smart move would have been wings and floats, like the Spruce Goose, when she bumped into a fellow-pedestrian and nearly knocked him over into a puddle the size of Lake Van.
âSorry,' she said.
The man, who was so sharply dressed you could have used him for open-heart surgery and, despite the lack of hat or umbrella, as dry as a bone, smiled at her.
âNot at all,' he replied. âBut you're wrong about the wings, you know.'
Jane's jaw flopped down like undercarriage. âWhat?' she said.
âWings,' the man replied, still smiling. âIf the ancestors of mankind had grown wings, they wouldn't have needed to develop manual dexterity and the use of tools. That way, their brains wouldn't have adapted and become what they eventually did become. Result, you wouldn't be a human, just a big pink bird, and the chimpanzees would be feeding you breadcrumbs in Trafalgar Square. Think about it.'