Susan shrugged. âYes,' she said, âbut it wouldn't be any advantage to me, and I'm rather pressed for time. And now, if you don't mind, I really must be going. I won't bother with my things, if it's all the same to you - it'll be hell facing the future without my Darth Vader coffee mug and my cute furry VDU-top animal, but I guess I'll just have to be very brave. I suggest you give them to the Institute of Contemporary Arts, if the dustmen won't take them.'
âGo,' Mrs White said, making a vague shooing gesture. âGood luck with whatever it is.'
âThank you,' Susan replied solemnly, and left.
After she'd gone, Mrs White sat still for a while, thinking and chewing the end of her pencil. Over the years she'd been managing the branch, she'd seen ever so many bright young men and women come and, invariably, go (that was how she knew they'd been bright), but at least the reasons had always been fairly self-evident. Usually it was because they'd got a better job somewhere else, one that paid enough for a Brahmin ascetic to live on. Often girls left to spawn, boys left to tour Australia in unreliable camper vans or write novels. Sometimes they left because they couldn't stand the sight of Mrs White any longer, or because they'd had enough of estate agency and decided to go straight. At least she'd always known; this was the first time in twenty years that she simply hadn't got a clue. Her instinctive reaction was that it had something to do with young Paul being kidnapped in that deplorably melodramatic fashion; after all, what better way to provide for a secure financial future than to hold the son of one of the world's richest men for ransom? The police would be bound to see it that way when she told them. But her instincts were often wrong. It had something to do with Paul Willis, but only tangentially; more likely, it had something to do with Karen Orme (who was a much more credible suspect for the kidnapping thingânever trust someone who voluntarily washes out other people's coffee cups and then hangs the wet dishcloth over the taps to dry) and whatever it was the police had been chasing her for, several days before Paul was abducted . . .
Mrs White shook her head like a wet dog, as if trying to be rid of the whole subject. Whatever the deadly secret really was, she was fairly certain it didn't have anything to do with the business of peddling overpriced dwellings, which was the only field of activity that really concerned her. She made up her mind; first a cup of tea, then check Susan's in-tray for anything that needed doing, then a phone call to the cloning vats for a couple more junior staff. Once she'd done that, she'd be free to get on with some work, for a change.
Terrorism? Drugs? Fanatical religious cults? The CIA? Nah. They weren't the type, any of them; too clean-cut, pink and English for anything like that. Even Karen - in her memory, she'd already tagged her mental image of Karen with the
weirdo
icon; stereotyping does wonders for information-retrieval response times - even Karen the Weirdo had been weird in a typically English, boring way. The thought of either of those dreary young women being involved in anything more dangerous or exciting than putting on dark glasses to go slumming at a Chippendales gig was more than her imagination could encompass, whereas Paul - if anybody ever wandered through life with a fluorescent sign on his back reading VICTIM: PLEASE DISPOSE OF REMAINS TIDILY, it was him. Anything they could possibly have been up to would have to have been something you wouldn't mind your mother knowing about. The hell with them.
Once the kettle had boiled, and her teabag was quietly stewing on the end of its leash, she remembered to phone the police. They were very interested indeed to learn that Susan had left unexpectedly without leaving a forwarding address (she didn't bother to point out that she had given them this information a couple of days earlier, and they had it on file; it'd give them something to do, finding that out the hard way) and they did their best to insinuate that whatever it was that Karen had done, she must have been in on it too. She ignored that, as being the equivalent of a puppydog whining at her feet with its lead in its mouth, said goodbye politely and hung up; she was hot, her desk fan wasn't working and the way the sun was leering at her through the office's plate-glass window seemed to imply some kind of personal grudge. Enough of these fevered imaginings; it was a fact that English people tended to go a little crazy if they'd had to go without rain for more than ten days.
It was just after half-past five, when the office was officially closed but she hadn't got around to locking up, when the strange men in grey suits walked in. There were three of them, which puzzled her a little. Policemen arrive in pairs, or by helicopter in the small hours and wielding sledgehammers. The extra body implied that what she had here was one of the more recherché breeds of pest. This intrigued her; at the very least, they must be foreign policemen (as in the old Soviet joke; one can read, one can write, and the third one keeps an eye on the two intellectuals). Accordingly she gave them a broad smile and asked how she could help them. Were they, she enquired out of wickedness, interested in buying a nice house?
The spokesman shook his head. He seemed uncomfortable, rather uncertain when he spoke (as if Human wasn't his first language).
âNot really,' he replied. âActually, we were looking for someone.'
Mrs White clicked her tongue. âI'm terribly sorry,' she said, âbut we don't sell people, just houses. I suggest you try the employment bureau, six doors down on your left; or I've heard there's quite a nice brothel in Kennedy Street, round the back of Marks and Spencersâ'
âA specific person,' the spokesman said, reaching inside his buttoned jacket and producing a rather unflattering picture of Susan. âDo you recognise this woman?'
Mrs White took the photo and studied it for a while, holding it up to the light at various angles and even turning it upside down. âI think so,' she said.
âShe works here,' the man pointed out.
âAh,' Mrs White said. âThat'll explain why the face seems familiar.'
To his credit, the man didn't seem to mind. It was as if he wasn't really aware that she was trying to be funny, like a foreigner failing to get the point of a pun. âYes,' he said. âIs she here, or has she gone home?'
Mrs White shook her head. âShe left,' she replied. âLeft as in went away for ever. Are you boys policemen?'
The man thought for a moment before answering. âNo,' he said. âWe're friends.'
Mrs White smiled. âAll three of you? How nice.'
âFriends of Susan's,' the man said, speaking a little louder, the way Mrs White would have done to someone who didn't understand English. âShe said that if we were ever in the area, we should drop by and say hello.'
âSo you brought along a photograph of her so she'd know who she was. How thoughtful. Well,' Mrs White went on, âI'm terribly sorry, but I honestly don't know where she is. As I told you, she quit her job here this morning, and she didn't tell me where she was going.'
The three men looked at each other. âOh,' the spokesman said. âIsn't thatâ' I mean, that's unusual.' One of his colleagues nudged him and whispered something in his ear. âPerhaps she left to have a baby,' he said.
âIt's possible,' Mrs White replied. âBut if that was the case, I'd have expected her back by now. I mean, it's been over seven hours.'
âAh,' the man said. âOf course, yes. Well, if you do see her, please let her know we called.'
âOf course.' Mrs White nodded. âWould you like me to tell her your names, or will she know who you are?'
âJust say her friends called,' the man replied. âShe'll understand. '
After they'd gone, Mrs White sat quite still for some time. One of the life skills that a career in estate agency teaches you is the knack of recognising the truth even when it's apparently impossible; and for what she'd definitely heard the strange men say, there was only one logical explanation. They weren't human.
She recalled the faces into her conscious mind: Karen, Paul and Susan. Boy, had she underestimated one of them!
In fact, it challenged a whole bunch of comfortable assumptions about the nature of aliens. Could it really be true that what they actually said on establishing first contact was, âTake me to your classic underachievers'? Were they really as dumb and gullible as they'd seemed? Could any sentient life form be that gormless and still remember to breathe? It was possible; everything's possible in a curved and infinite universe. Somehow she'd allowed herself to lose sight of that fact over the last fifty years.
It was all very interesting, but what it lacked at the moment was a quantifiable financial value. That, however, was something she could change. Pulling open the top drawer of her desk she took out a small notebook, in which she'd written down the special telephone number, the one with all the 0s at each end, that Paul's father had given her when he came to work here (the idea being that when, as would inevitably happen, he got himself into some horrendously complex and expensive form of trouble, she was to ring him and let him know in good time so he could get damage limitation under way as soon as possible). She hadn't called the number before and wasn't really expecting it to work; but it did, because fairly soon after she'd dialled it, she found herself listening to a mellow, avuncular voice saying, âPaddy Willis here.'
She hesitated for a split second. She had a feeling that what she was about to do was somehow wrong. On the other hand, she was morally certain that it would be extremely profitable. She smiled.
âMr Willis,' she said, âyou won't remember me, but . . .'
CHAPTER EIGHT
âM
y third wife - no, hold on, I've skipped a marriage somewhere, my
fourth
wife, she was a redhead. Green eyes. Freckles. You know,' Gordon went on, ignoring the fact that Neville hadn't been listening for at least a quarter of an hour, âthis is a funny old country. You need to have all kinds of licences and stuff before they let you own dynamite, and yet there's women walking around with long red hair, green eyes and freckles, and nobody seems to give a damn. But when you think of all the damage one green-eyed freckled redhead can do in just one afternoonâ'
âAre you sure this is the right direction?' Neville interrupted. âOnly I'm fairly sure we came this way an hour ago.'
âDon't think so,' Gordon said firmly. âI mean,' he went on, âwith dynamite, all you can really do is blow stuff up. By contrast, the variety of different ways in which a green-eyed redhead with freckles can bugger up someone's life is pretty well infinite, especially,' he added with feeling, âif she's wearing light blue. If the disarmament process is ever going to get anywhere, they're going to have to round up all the red-haired, green-eyed, freckled women in long blue dresses and bury them in concrete somewhere in the New Mexico desert. Otherwise, it's just asking for trouble.'
âDefinitely been this way before,' Neville said. âLook, there's that crab-shaped mark on the wall.'
Gordon stopped to take a closer look. âThat's not a crab,' he said. âMore like a horseshoe. The crab-shaped mark was just past the taped-off three-phase point.'
âYou're thinking of the
other
taped-off three-phase point,' Neville replied. âOnly it wasn't, it was a vent outlet. It just looked like a three-phase point.'
They looked at each other for a moment.
âSorry,' Gordon said, âI haven't got a clue where we are, either.'
âWonderful. Then why were you leading the way like you owned the place?'
âI was following you.'
âOh, forâ' Neville leaned his back against the corridor wall and slid down it to the floor. âThis is getting us nowhere,' he said.
âYou know,' Gordon replied, squatting down beside him, âjust then you sounded remarkably like my first wife.'
âThe blonde?'
âThe other blonde. She used to take every slight navigational error as proof of gross moral turpitude. Then she'd insist I find somebody to ask.'
Neville sighed. âThey do that,' he agreed.
âAnd then, when you do ask someone, they give you directions that don't make sense or lead you round in a circle. And then you get spoken to for not following the directions properly.' Gordon paused, and frowned. âI didn't realise you were married,' he said.
âI'm not. But I do have a sister.'
Gordon nodded. âI believe sisters can sometimes be worse,' he said.
âYou haven't got any sisters?'
âOddly enough, no. I've always assumed the extra wives were to make up.' He stared at the wall opposite, as if trying to cut through it with his X-ray vision. âI had a brother once,' he continued. âHad him for years. But then he became a chartered actuary and moved to Canada.'