âNo, but if you told me I'd be ever so grateful.'
âCentral heating,' the man replied. âDouble glazing. Loft insulation. Cavity walls. Not to mention umbrellas and wax-cotton jackets and covered stands at football grounds. We turned our backs on our climatic heritage, and the weather turned its back on us. We made ourselves snug and comfy, and forfeited our birthright. Or are you going to sit there and tell me it's a coincidence that the last time England won the World Cup, Britain had just had two of the harshest winters in living memory?'
âThat's very interesting,' Gordon said. âI certainly hadn't thought of it that way before.'
âDon't suppose you had,' the man said. âThat's the tragedy of it, I suppose; we take our weather for granted, instead of getting down on our knees every morning and evening and thanking God for the highest mean annual rainfall in the Western hemisphere.'
âTypical,' Gordon said. âBut that's the public for you. Don't know they're born, most of them.'
The man frowned. âBut of course,' he said. âThat's the point. They mustn't know. If they knew, it'd ruin everything.'
Not for the first time, Gordon felt as if the room had just turned upside down, so that the floor was now the ceiling and vice versa. âIt would?'
âUse your head, man, of course it would. You can't expect people to do things if they know why they're doing them. The government of the country would grind to a halt. You'd have anarchy inside a week. Think about it.' The man steepled his fingers. âIt's like lab rats,' he said. âThey prod the right buffer with their noses, they get the cheese. Wrong buffer, electric shock. Perfectly valid way of doing an experiment. But if the rats knewâ'
âI beg your pardon?'
âIt's all right, you can't help being stupid. Look: the rats work out which buffer means cheese and which one gets them the volts. They make the system work for them, they think. If they get it right, they get fed; that's the way the world works, the way they see it. In other words, lab rats think the maze exists for the benefit of the rats. They're able to carry on believing it because they don't know about the scientists. Exactly the same with human beings. The moment people stop believing that society and the way things work are there for their benefit, they'll stop bashing their noses against the walls, and everything will grind to a halt. And that's why,' he went on, breathing deeply, âthe man in the street can't be allowed to understand about the weather. It's that simple.'
âAh,' Gordon said.
âWhich is why we need the dragon.'
âOf course. Now that you've explained it all, it makes perfect sense.'
The man shrugged. âAnybody with the IQ of a small rock ought to be able to work it out for himself. Fortunately,' he went on, opening a drawer, âninety-nine point nine nine nine per cent of the British people don't quite measure up to those criteria, so the secret's still relatively safe.' He pushed a piece of paper across the desk. âSign here.'
âOf course,' Gordon said, accepting the pen. âWhat is it, by the way? Just out of interest.'
âThe Official Secrets Act, what do you think? All right,' he said, ânow your friend. Yes, you. Wake up and sign the form.'
But Neville kept his arms resolutely folded, drawing a look of extreme annoyance from the man behind the desk. âExcuse me,' Gordon said quickly, âbut would it help if I just explained things to him? Won't be a moment,'
âCarry on,' the man said. âSave me having to beat the shit out of him, I suppose. Not that I'd mind, only my tendinitis has been playing me up lately.'
Gordon hauled Neville to his feet and pushed him into the corner of the room.
âListen,' he whispered. âObviously this guy is barking mad, but he's the one with the keys and the armed guards, so if you know what's good for youâ'
âWhat do you mean, barking mad?' Nevilie replied. âIt all made perfect sense to me.'
Gordon closed his eyes for a moment. âIt did, did it?'
âLike he said, you've have to be pretty thick not to figure it out for yourself. Doesn't mean I'm going to stand by and let the bastards steal my dragon.'
âOf course not,' Gordon hissed softly. âThe very idea. But you're going to find it much harder with two broken arms and a dislocated shoulder to get the dragon back. So sign the bloody form.'
Neville thought for a moment. âI suppose you're right,' he said. âPlay along, lull them into a false sense of security. Okay, I'll sign.'
Gordon looked at the steel door and thought about the M16s that seemed to be standard issue for the large number of steel-helmeted, Kevlar-clad guards they'd met in the corridors.
False sense of security
, he thought.
Yeah, right
.
âGive me that form,' Neville was saying. âCan I read it first?'
âWhat do you think this is, a library?' The man stabbed at the form with a sausage-like finger. âSign there, on the line. That's it. Now give me back my pen.'
For some reason, Neville hesitated, so Gordon grabbed the pen from him and handed it back. As he did so, he noticed that it had the words âA Souvenir Of Chichester Cathedral' embossed up one side in little gold letters.
âThank you,' the man said, putting it away in his shirt pocket. âRight, I think that's covered everything.'
âWonderful,' Gordon said. âCan we go home now, please?'
The man narrowed his eyes. âAre you trying to be funny?' he said.
âExcuse me?'
âYou can't go home,' the man said. âFor God's sake, haven't you heard a word I've said? This is a matter of
national security
.' He thumped the desk with his fist, creating a breeze that blew the two Official Secrets forms off the desktop and onto the floor.
For some reason, Gordon wasn't impressed. âWhat do you mean?' he said. âAre you trying to tell me we can't go home?'
âI'd have thought that was obvious.'
âFor how long?'
The man shrugged. âFor ever. Well,' he added, âin theory the restriction period comes under the hundred-and-fifty-year rule, after which I suppose you could apply to have your cases reviewed by the internal-security sub-committee. I wouldn't hold your breath, though, if I were you.'
Gordon nonetheless took a deep breath, which helped him not to fall over. âAnd in the meantime?' he said. âWhat happens to us?'
âNot my department,' the man replied. âOfficially you're now both under the jurisdiction of the resettlement and rehabilitation sub-committee, whose function is to provide you with new identities, jobs, a place to live, everything you need to start a new and rewarding life without endangering national security.'
âI see,' Gordon replied guardedly.
âIn practice,' the man went on, âyou aren't allowed to leave this building until the sub-committee's ruled on your case, and the sub-committee isn't due to meet again for another sixteen years. It's not as bad as it sounds, actually. There's four whole floors of disused offices up near the top of the building where we usually put people like you; last time I heard, they'd got quite a thriving little community up there. Apparently they do stuff like weaving wicker baskets and making sourdough wall-plaques. A couple of the guards' wives take them on and sell them at craft fairs. Next year, I'm told, they're planning on doing a production of
The Mikado
.'
âSixteen years.'
âAccording to the schedule, yes; though, from what I gather, they may be running a bit behind. Oh, don't look at me with those God-awful puppydog eyes. There's starving refugees in Somalia who'd give their right arms for a nice office to sleep in and doughnuts on Fridays.'
âAbsolutely,' Gordon said. âWell, we'd better be on our way, then.'
The man nodded approvingly. âGood attitude,' he said. âOh, and by the way - thanks for the dragon.'
âYou're welcome,' Gordon said, stamping hard on Neville's foot before he could interrupt. âWe both feel sure it couldn't be in better hands.' He paused for a moment. âI guess you aren't really supposed to tell us this,' he went on, âbut could you maybe just give us a small hint about what you're planning to do with it now you've got it?'
âWell . . .' The man pursed his lips, probably for the first time in his life. âYou're right, I'm not supposed to tell you, but since you know about the dragon already, and you've both signed the Act, plus the fact that neither of you's going to be in a position to misuse this information any time soonâ' He frowned, then leaned forward across the desk and beckoned. âWe're going to make it rain.'
âI see. And?'
The man shook his head. âNo, you don't understand. We're going to make it rain
a lot
.'
âAnd you think people will notice?'
âNot at first,' the man replied. âBut of course, that's part of the plan. If they realise something unusual's happening, it'd spoil everything, for the reasons I mentioned just now. No; gently does it, that's the way to go. Constant drizzling rain for nine months or so; then, when everybody's fed up to the teeth and all they're interested in is where they're going for their holidaysâ'
âYes?'
âWe close the airports,' the man said triumphantly. âHaven't quite decided yet how we're going to do it - terrorist scare, maybe, or we could say we're concemed about latent design faults in current-service airliners, or maybe we'll just provoke an air traffic controllers' strike. Details aren't important; what matters is that we stop everybody going on holiday and make them stay here all summer. In the rain.'
âBrilliant,' Gordon said, trying not to make it obvious that he was slowly backing away. âAnd what'll that achieve, exactly?'
The man didn't smile, but he chuckled. âWell,' he said, âfor a start it'll piss the general public off good and proper. It'll breed tension and dissatisfaction which, as you know, are the mother and father of overseas expansion. We won't do anything overt in the first two years, of course, we'll just let a good head of steam build up. Come the third year, if everything goes to plan, the British people will be so sick and tired of constant 365-days-a-year rain, they'll jump at the chance of going anywhere. And that's when we invade Australia.'
Gordon nodded slowly, four times. âMasterful,' he said.
The man shook his head. âThat's not it,' he replied, sounding disappointed at Gordon's lack of perception. âThat's just the first step. We really only want Tasmania.'
âTasmania.'
âThat' s right. It's about the right size, you see. And of course the position's perfect; 140 degrees north, 40 degrees east. Couldn't have a better launch site if we were building one from scratch.'
âLaunch site.'
âWell, yes. For when we colonise the Moon. Think about it: it's wide open, unexploited, mineral-rich, and
it never rains
. It'll be the Pilgrim Fathers all over again, except,' he added grimly, âthis time we'll do it
properly
.'
Gordon took a deep breath. âGenius,' he said.
âI thought so,' the man replied. âOf course, those fools in Parliament wouldn't listen; said it'd cost too much money, and the Americans might object. The hell with that; once we've built the laser-cannon installations at New Godalming, nobody's going to give a damn about what the Yanks think about anything.'
âSo you're going to go ahead anyway?'
âOf course. It's one of the advantages of coming under the Home Office; we have a certain degree of discretion as to how we interpret the strict letter of the law. Like the police.'
For a moment or so, Gordon couldn't think of anything to say. âWell,' he finally mumbled, âvery best of luck with the project, hope it all comes together for you. We'll be getting along now. Don't want to miss out on the doughnuts.'
The man shook his head. âDoughnuts are on Fridays,' he said. âI just told you that.'
Gordon nodded. âEven so,' he said, âit never hurts to get in the queue early.'
âGood point. All right, sergeant,' the man said, nodding to the guard who'd appeared noiselessly in the doorway, âtake them up to the thirty-sixth floor, they're expected. So long, then,' he added, giving Gordon a little wave. âRemember, 'tis a far, far better thing, and all that jazz.'
âOh, absolutely. And let me say it's been a privilege.'
âYes.'
âIt's so nice,' Gordon went on, âto meet a man with vision. Several visions, in fact.'
âAnd the voices, too,' the man replied. âThey're a great comfort to me, the voices. Thank you for your cooperation.'
A doormat-sized hand closed on Gordon's shoulder. âMy pleasure,' he muttered.
âWe may even name a city after you,' the man added. âOn the Moon.'
âThat'd be nice.'
âSmelt City.'
âOr Smelt's Landing,' Gordon suggested. âGot a ring to it, that has'
The man made a note on his desk jotter. âNice one,' he said.
âOr maybe even Smeltsylvania?'
âDon't push your luck,' the man said. âOn your way.'
Gordon waited until the guard had marched them along two corridors and into the lift. As the doors closed behind them, he decided to make his move.
âExcuse me,' he said.
The guard pretended not to have heard him, but he was expecting that and didn't let it bother him. âExcuse me,' he repeated, âbut did you happen to overhear what your boss was saying to us? About invading Australia and colonising the Moon?'