I stared down at the words. He must have written this before he left here to go looking for the Ludovician, which would make it, what, some sort of a mission statement? Whatever it was, it seemed like something he didn’t want the doctor to find after he’d gone. Why write it down on a book, on this book? Unless – unless he knew I’d recognise Dr Randle’s name and I’d …Did he send me to her? Send me to spend a year with her listening to those stupid fucking theories just so when I finally got here I’d pull this particular book off the shelf and find this message? And if so, why? What was this supposed to mean? Something came back to me, something from one of First Eric Sanderson’s letters, something written much later, when the word shark had already eaten most of him away:
I think I believed I could change what happened, undo it, prevent it, save her life somehow after she was already gone
.
I read through the paragraph inside the dust jacket again.
“Christ, Eric. What the fuck is this?” I whispered it. “What the fuck were you trying to do?”
“What the fuck were you trying to do?”
I turned the room over. Filled the air with long-settled dust and the bed with T-shirts, pants and socks from the chest of drawers and a heap of opened, shaken-out books from the bookshelf. The shock doctor couldn’t hold it back anymore, now I was a creature made of wounded kinetics. “What the fuck were you trying to do? Come on, I’m ready for my next clue now.” I pulled open the wardrobe, dragging out pairs of jeans and combat pants, heavy coats and boots into a pile on the floor. “Or, maybe you could just fucking tell me. How about that? I deserve to know why I’m like this, don’t I? I deserve to know why you made me into this
empty fucking thing
, this machine that people can’t really touch or feel anything for and so they just –”
Use.
Scout. She used you, Eric.
“Fuck. Fuck fuck fuck.” The dam all the way broken, everything flooding out now. I ripped out the last of the clothes from the wardrobe, stretch-twisting hangers, pulled out the last of the boots and the carrier bags of trainers and rolled-up jumpers and old shirts onto the pile on the floor and kicked at it shouting “You cunt, Sanderson, you selfish fucking cunt.”
A plastic bag caught around my foot and I pulled it off, hurling it at the wall where it split like a medical IV bag of boots and old socks.
Bang. Thud tunk tunk tunk
.
I gave the pile two, three more half-hearted kicks and sank down to my knees – “You fucking, fucking cunt” – slowing down in the next swell of shock. Another anaesthetic tide rising up from my stomach.
My sore eyes stared, blank.
Minutes ticked away and I squeezed myself tight. My arms hugged warm around my chest.
The heap of clothes sat, kicked and bullied and still, in front of me.
My sore eyes stared.
One of the plastic bags on the top of the pile had a box inside, a shoebox probably. I’d kicked a dent into it and a lid corner had been forced up, stretching a tract of the navy blue plastic into puckered stuttery sky blue, before ripping through it altogether. Inside the box was what looked like a block of carefully folded white linen.
Curiosity, like a film playing backwards, bringing a million smashed pieces back together – slow, faster, faster, faster, complete – remaking them into me.
I blinked.
Wiped my eyes.
My hand reached out.
I took the dented box and, slowly, abstractedly, worked it out of its ruined bag. The three rectangular objects inside had been carefully, very, very carefully, wrapped up in soft white cloth. I stared for a few seconds. I took the box over to the desk and put it down.
Grabbing a bottle of water out of my rucksack, I took a slow, cool drink then splashed a wet palmful onto my eyes and face, drying myself off with my pulled-up T-shirt.
I ran my fingers through my hair, pulled the desk chair up behind me.
Okay
.
Okay then. Let’s have a look at you
.
I lifted the first object out of the box. It was the thinnest of the three, as thin and light as an envelope, and that’s almost what it was. I unfolded the white cloth and found a photograph wallet: one of the bright, glossy card packets your prints and negatives come back in from the chemist’s. The colourful picture on the front flap showed a girl jumping on a guy’s back, both of them laughing and dressed in bright summer clothes.
Underneath it said
Kodak
in big, bold letters and to the right of that, in a yellow and orange starburst,
36 exposures
. I lifted the flap and I looked inside and then, just to be sure, I turned it upside down and shook. Nothing. No pictures, no negatives. The wallet was completely empty. I turned it over and around to see if I’d missed something important, like I almost had with Randle’s book, but no, it was just an empty photo wallet. An empty photo wallet wrapped, stored and treated as a relic.
Why?
Maybe the answer was still in the box.
Thick, heavy and solid, I knew the second object was a book before I’d even unwrapped it from its cloth protection. I wasn’t prepared for the kind of book I’d find though.
An Encyclopaedia of Unusual Fish
by Dr Victor Helstrom. The book looked sixty, maybe eighty years old. A hardback in a tattered, ripped and faded orange dust jacket with an old-fashioned ink drawing of a very ugly deep sea fish on the front.
In a lightning strike I remembered the book sent by Mr Nobody and the sick, slimy winding Luxophage hiding inside. I almost shoved
Unusual Fish
off the desk in a jerk of panic.
But this was the First Eric Sanderson’s room, the First Eric Sanderson’s book. The ice thawed a little inside my head as I stared at the old, creased cover.
Come on, Eric. Get a grip. And anyway, what are you going to do? Not look?
I pulled the book back towards me and carefully opened it up.
The pages were dry and yellowed, dirty at the edges and the thing smelled of cigarette smoke and finger grease. I skipped through a long and wordy introduction and found a contents page. The author, this Victor Helstrom, had divided his unusual fish into categories.
The Fish of the Deep Oceans | 4 |
The Fish of Scottish Lochs and Other Bleak Localities | 184 |
Prehistoric Fish and Their Fossils | 347 |
The Fish of Mind, Word and Invention | 442 |
I flipped my way towards the back of the book. The first three categories were filled with ink drawings and long detailed descriptions and notes, but when I reached ‘
The Fish of Mind, Word and Invention’
, entries became smaller, blocky and unillustrated, like a dictionary.
Apalasitien, Araul Calthonis, ‘Blinking’ Quaric Blue Bonbolian, Burgnatell
– I flicked forwards a few pages –
Fathmic Candiru, Franciscan (“Bede Shark”), Flatwold, Folocondorius
– and a few more –
Jarhaphish (“Inknose”), Lampropini, Ledgerlantern, Lewzivian
– and there it was – Ludovician.
The entry had been circled in pencil. My left hand crept up to my chin and then over my mouth as my eyes shuttled down through the passage:
Ludovician
First officially catalogued for the USC by Capt. St John Lewis in 1839, and named in honour of him by the society, the Ludovician shark has been a cause of myth, speculation and storytelling for over four thousand years (see below). A powerful and persistent mnemonic predator, Ludovicians are to be considered amongst the most dangerous of all sentapiscis and should only be observed after great preparation and with extreme caution.
With a recorded length of over thirty notional lumens from snout to tail tip, the Ludovician is the largest living member of the Cognicharius family, outsized only by the gigantic Meglovician which seems to have become extinct between four and five hundred years ago, possibly due to the western diversification of printed language from a previously prevalent Latin. The Ludovician appears to be more adaptable and, as a result, is more widely distributed than its extinct
cousin. Although the animal is solitary and (thankfully) rarely encountered in the field, Ludovician attacks on speakers of over twenty languages have been reliably reported over the past fifty years. This and other research suggests a stable, if not growing population.Ludovician characteristics
: Portentous, impassive to vague to vacant colouration, sepulchral bite radius, regressively swept fins and ubiquitous dorsal meme.Ludovician myths
: It should come as little surprise that this large, dangerous and enigmatic predator should be the focus of much legend and superstition. Perhaps the most engaging of all the myths associated with these animals is the ancient Native American belief that all memories, events and identities consumed by one of the
great dream fishes
would somehow be reconstructed and eternally sustained inside it. The indigenous oral tradition tells us how the greatest shamans and medicine men would travel to ancestral holy places
to pass their souls into the dream fish
when they reached old age. These shamans believed that once they had sacrificed themselves, they would join their ancestors and memory-families in eternal
vision-worlds
recreated from generations of shared knowledge and experience. In effect, each Ludovician shark came to be revered as a self-contained, living afterlife. Name chants once told which of the ancestors had passed into which of the seven greatest dream fish, but these are now understood to be fragmented and lost. Thankfully, this misguided and macabre practice is no longer observed.
As my mind raced, my hands turned Helstrom’s book of fish over and placed it carefully to one side,
Ludovician
pages down. I reached inside the shoebox and took out the last wrapped object. This was a book too, smaller but just as thick, maybe even a little thicker.
I unfolded the cloth and looked inside.
Thump. Thump.
Thump. Thump.
Thump. Thump.
My heart. All I could hear as I stared at the last book’s cover.
Thump. Thump.
Thump. Thump.
Thump. Thump.
My fingers traced the folds and fault lines in the glossy card. Thump. Thump. My fingers over pictures of sandy bays, crumbling columns and little white villages on hot dusty hillsides. Thump. Thump. My fingers over the blocky sky blue lettering of the title.
Greek Island Hopping: A Backpacker’s Guide
.
Shaking, I opened the book –
– and found a universe inside.
An entire galaxy of biro stars, pen orbits and ink loop rings around museums and boat rides and campsites, endless stellar clusters of ticks, crosses, exclamation and question marks all in, on and around the lists of
tavernas
and bed and breakfasts and bars and towns and trails and beaches.
“Oh God.” No force behind the words, just them escaping, leaking out in my breath.
My fingers touching the indentations, the pen marks, the folded page corners.
Clio
.
Clio’s guidebook.
Clio Aames’s real and true and actual writing right there in front of me.
The printed words and the biro warped and rolled together for a second. Something hit the page with an audible
tap
. I tensed up, thinking again about Nobody and his book traps, about Luxophages, Franciscans and Ludovicians. Then I noticed my face, my cheeks were wet.
I looked down again across Clio’s constellations of notes. Tap. Tap. Tap.
I hadn’t even realised I was crying.
Tired, I closed Clio’s guidebook again, climbed off the First Eric Sanderson’s bed and collected my rucksack, dragging it back across the room with me. I dug The Light Bulb Fragment and my notebooks out and read through them again, once, twice, three times, feeling an empty ache for something simple and normal and solid.
I thought a lot about Clio and about Eric. And then because I couldn’t help it, I thought about Scout and me.
Would Clio have done what Scout did?
Oh, come on, you know the answer to that
. Sometimes, when you’re sleepy, ideas and feelings in the back of your mind get whispery voices of their own.
She’s just doing what she’s always done, what’s best for you, whether you can see it at the time or not.
I tried to block it out, but the nonsense wouldn’t let go.
You know, don’t you? The way it works between the two of you, all those emotions, the tattoo on her big toe. You know who she really is, even if you won’t
–
“Shut up.” My arm shot out and hurled the texts and the notebooks against the wall. The books thudded, flapped and settled like a flock of broken kites.
Half-climbed onto the end of the bed, Ian stopped mid-step and stared at me with big round eyes.
Sometimes when I think I can’t sleep, I actually
am
part-way asleep. Or at least, not completely awake. For the hours I’d been lying on the First Eric Sanderson’s bed trying to unpick the knotted tangle of events and fragments in my mind, I’d have said I was one hundred per cent all-the-way awake with no chance of sleeping. But now, standing in the book corridor outside, I felt light, half-focused, unsteady on my feet. The things I’d been thinking back on the bed, those intricate thought trains I’d been putting together now seemed to be all flickering lights and groundless leaps of logic – ideas warped and twisted by the un-sense that lives at the edge of sleep.
But then, maybe there was something else about that place too; maybe white out-of-the-corner-of-your-eye truth birds dive and swoop there, little rips of blotter paper soaring free from the weight of fact and possibility which extincts them everywhere else.
What? White birds? Wake up, Eric
. I rubbed my face with my palms to bring myself around and drive out the fog.
I pulled on my jacket and quietly closed the door.
I needed answers. That’s why I couldn’t sleep. Clio Aames, the Ludovician, the First Eric Sanderson. There was only one person who would be able to give me the facts.
I’d loaded the things I’d found in the First Eric’s room into a plastic bag;
The Encyclopaedia of Unusual Fish
, Clio’s guidebook, the empty photo wallet and (after some sleepy soul-searching) Randle’s book jacket with the First Eric Sanderson’s hidden message. I’d also packed my Light Bulb Fragment notebooks. It seemed to make sense to take everything, to try to get him to look at all of it.
Getting dressed, I’d been worried the lights would be off and the maze of books and corridors would be impossible to navigate, all corners, blackness and quiet like some huge silent brain. As it was, the lights seemed to stay on all night, but that didn’t make things any easier. After a few minutes’ walking and a few guessed-at turns, I started to worry I wouldn’t find my way out,
or
my way back. I turned around, tried to retrace my steps but I must have gone wrong at the second or the third junction because where I expected the bedroom door to be, it wasn’t. I stood looking at a blank, uninterrupted wall of books. A shower of cold nerve-needles down my back –
you’re lost, Eric
.
I called out: “Hello?”
Nothing.
“Can anyone hear me?”
But the books flattened the sound, sucked it in and breathed it out again as miles and miles of dusty silence.
I dropped my forehead against the wall of spines. “Fantastic.”
Then I heard a noise, distant and muffled but real and out there, a sound like a big bell or a gong striking in the distance.
Dang
– one.
Dang
– two.
A landmark. I pulled myself together and began to jog in the direction of the sound.
Dang
– three.
Dang
– four.
The corridor ended in a T-junction, I waited.
Dang
– five.
Left. I ran now, realising I had to find the sound before it stopped, realising this was an all or nothing strategy and if I didn’t make it in time I’d be properly, definitely all-the-way lost.
Dang
– six.
Dang
– seven.
Another left, another long and patchily lit corridor of books.
Dang
– eight.
Dang
– nine.
Dang
– ten.
Come on
, me running flat out, head down, pounding the floor.
Dang
– eleven.
Louder now, closer.
A branch corridor. Trying to slow down and throw myself around the corner, making it but hitting wall and scattering books.
Dang
– twelve.
I managed to stay on my feet, just, and jogging forwards I saw an archway. An archway in the wall of the corridor just up ahead. The sound coming from inside. It must be –
Dang
– thirteen.
My lungs were burning. I stopped, bent over double, hands on knees to catch my breath.
A moment passed.
Two moments.
“If you’re looking for the toilet, you’ve come too far. Go back to the last junction and turn right.”
The suddenness of it made me jump, but I knew the voice.
Still breathing hard, I straightened up and made my way towards the arch.
“Sorry.” I took half a step inside. “I got lost and there was, I think, a bell or something so I followed it. Actually – I was looking for you.”
Dr Fidorous turned around to face me.
“You heard that?”
“Yes.”
“Well, then. You’d better come in, hadn’t you?”
The room was small and empty apart from the doctor and a simple wooden table covered in candles against the far wall; no electric lighting here and nothing obvious to account for the noises I’d heard. The space looked to have been made from huge books, old encyclopaedias, dictionaries or atlases I thought, and their peeling leather spines, like thick bricks, twitched shadows in the candlelight. An old poster of a shaolin-style monk with a huge gong had been pinned up on one of the book-walls.
Fidorous sat cross-legged on a cushion in the middle of the floor, originally facing the table of candles but now shuffled around to look at me. He was different. For a second I thought it was a trick of the candlelight, but, no, he’d changed. His huge hair had been tamed a little, slicked back with Brylcreem. The dressing-gown had gone too. In its place was an old dark suit and light blue shirt. The doctor must have seen me looking.
“It’s easy to lose track of yourself down here,” he said. “When you don’t see other people for such a long time, you tend not to think” – he made a circular gesture in front of his face – “about all this.”
He seemed relatively calm but I’d seen first-hand how quickly that could change.
“I wasn’t –” I tried, then, “I didn’t mean to stare.”
He watched me for a moment and I had no idea what would happen. When he spoke, he looked away, turning back to the table of candles.
“I should never have said what I did to you about Scout. Whatever’s between the two of you should stay between the two of you. It wasn’t my business or my place to say those things.”
Cold flowing under my skin, like someone had watered down my blood.
“You were right, though. She was using me.”
“I know,” Fidorous said. “But she’s a girl who’s come a long way from where she started and from who she was. Some of her edges have worn sharp. It happens, you should know that. I shouldn’t have said those things.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“Because it’s the truth.”
“No, I mean, you made it pretty clear before that you don’t like me very much.”
The doctor turned back to me. “Is that what you think?”
“Well, yes.”
I saw for the first time how pale his eyes were behind the Michael Caine glasses. Even in the orange and shadows of candlelight, I could see
they were a clear, calm tropical blue; baby’s eyes in an old man’s face.
“It’s difficult,” he said at last, struggling even with that much. “It’s difficult when people become hell-bent on making terrible mistakes. I couldn’t let you walk out of here and kill yourself for some delusion.”
“Is that what happened?”
Fidorous shook his head, tiny, slow movements, eyes never leaving mine. This wasn’t an answer to my question, it was something else; a funeral expression, a deserted place between resignation and regret.
“There’s nothing left of you, is there?” he said.
The question knocked me. I didn’t know how to answer. “I didn’t – I’ve been trying to find you because I need help. I need answers. I don’t know much about his time or what he did or why, but I need to, I need to know him, I think. I have to figure it all out before this ends.”
“You’re not making sense – need to know who?”
“The First Eric Sanderson.”
The calm, blue eyes looked deep into me.
“I see. And that would make you, what? The Second Eric Sanderson?”
“Yes,” I said. “I suppose so.”
“Hmmm.” The doctor brought his eyebrows down at this, thoughtful. “An old man’s pride, that’s what you’ve been up against, I’m ashamed to say.”
“I’ve got to understand why he did what he did,” I said. I dug into my plastic bag and pulled out
The Encyclopaedia of Unusual Fish
. “I found this.”
Fidorous looked up at the book. The new warmth in him was suddenly gone, everything turning back to ice.
Cold snap
.
“Give me that.”
I hesitated but there was no way around it. I passed him the book.
“Listen to me, Eric Sanderson the Second, listen to me carefully – this book is sick. It’s sick and contagious with dangerous and misleading ideas, do you understand? I don’t want you to ever ask me about it again.” He wrenched open the pages and flung the encyclopaedia hard against the
wall. I heard the spine crack. The dead book fell clumsily to the floor.
I wasn’t shaken or intimidated. This was too big, too important.
I’d come to Fidorous for answers.
Sometimes answers don’t need to be given in words.
I stared at the broken book.
“That’s it, isn’t it?” I said.
Fidorous looked up at me, not moving, not speaking.
“First Eric Sanderson believed everything it said in there about memories living on inside word sharks. He believed it and so he went off looking for a Ludovician. Didn’t he?”
The doctor watched me from behind his thick glasses.
“Didn’t he?”
“Yes,” Fidorous said eventually.
“Jesus.” The pieces slipping into place now, one after another. “He found one and he gave himself to it. For Clio Aames. He did it for her, tried to save her life, preserve her after she was already gone, only it didn’t work. It didn’t work and the Ludovician ate his mind. It just chewed him up, didn’t it?”
“Yes.”
It just chewed him up
.
“Jesus.”
“Eric, I’m sorry.”
“So, God, I mean –” I cast around, spinning inside my head, looked again at the broken book. “There’s no chance any of it could be true?”
I believed I could change what happened, save her life somehow after she was already gone.
Fidorous looked away. “Conviction, point of view, ways of looking; these are all powerful tools if you know how to use them, but there are limits. The Ludovician shark is a living animal, an animal has its own nature and there’s no way to change that. A shark is always a shark, whatever you choose to believe. For memories to survive inside a Ludovician would be like – like a mouse surviving inside a cat.”
“But he wanted it to be true so much, didn’t he?”
He gave me a thin smile. “Yes, too much. I should never have passed the lessons on to him. I couldn’t stop him. I don’t think he could have stopped himself in the end. I should have turned him away when I first met him but I was selfish, I wanted the knowledge to survive.”
I reached into the carrier bag again and pulled out the dust jacket from Randle’s book. I folded it over to the hidden message.
I’m sorry, Eric
, I thought,
you wanted this to be a secret but your plans all failed, didn’t they? It’s because of you that I’m like this and now I need to ask for help
.
“I found this too,” I said, passing the dust jacket to Fidorous. “It was hidden in Eric’s room.”
Fidorous took the page and read it, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose.
“What does it mean?”
He looked at me over the top of the dust jacket.
“Nothing. It doesn’t mean anything except that he’d pushed himself too far.” Fidorous passed the page back to me. “He was a good man. That is to say you were a good man, when you were him. It must be strange for you; God knows it’s strange for me, seeing you here after everything that happened.”
“Yeah, I can imagine.”
“You know, I would have liked to have known him before the accident, before she died.”
“Me too.”
“By the time he came to me … he was always so sad.”
“He would have done anything to save her, wouldn’t he?”
“Yes, I think that’s right. Is that the way you feel about Scout?”
When someone asks a question out of the blue, there’s a chance the guards will be caught sleeping. When this happens, the brain sometimes responds before the mind has chance to lock the doors and winch your standard
mind your own business
flag up the flagpole. Sometimes the brain surprises everyone, even itself, with its answers.
“Yeah. I mean, maybe if things had carried on and if this hadn’t –” I pressed my lips together to stop the spilling words. “But it was all lies. What does it matter how I feel when none of it was real in the first place?”
“She came to see me after the two of you had spoken.”
“I know.” I tried to sound like I didn’t care. “What did she say?”
“That I of all people should know there’s always more to a situation than the cold, hard facts.” Fidorous thought. “Although she used different words to say it.”
A small smile. “That sounds about right.”
I wanted to know more but I didn’t want to
ask
more. The words hovered in my throat and then the time for asking had gone.
There was an awkward silence.
“I should have stopped you leaving,” Fidorous said. “I mean Eric Sanderson One.”
“I don’t think you could have changed anything.”
“I let my feelings get in the way and as a result I didn’t do all I could to save the situation. I’ll admit to you now; I’ve regretted it ever since.”
I found myself feeling restless.
“She lied to me,” I said. It felt petty as I said it and I kicked against the feeling, the embarrassment making me angry. “It’s all just been lies. How can I trust her now even if I wanted to?”
“Why are you asking me?”
“Because there’s no one else to ask.”
“Then maybe you should stop asking and start thinking for yourself.”
“–”
“Time is always running out.” Fidorous pulled off his glasses and rubbed them against his sleeve. “Life’s much too uncertain to leave important things unsaid.”