looking blonde teenager bubbling over with life and high spirits. I, on the other hand, was made of sterner stuff, so I nodded briefly and went right back to glaring around me. My new office was bigger than some of the places I've lived in, broad and spacious and absolutely packed with all the latest conveniences and luxuries, just as Cathy had promised. It was bright and cheerful and open, representing Cathy's personality and absolutely nothing of mine. A long way from my last office, a pokey little room in a seedy building in a really bad area of London. I'd run away from

the Nightside some years ago, to escape the many pressures and dangers involved in being me, but I'd never been very successful in the real world. For all my many sins, I belonged here in the Nightside, with all the other monsters.

I cautiously decided that I approved of this new office, with its colourful walls, deep pile carpet, and enough room to swing an elephant. But it had to be said that Cathy had not been entirely truthful about everything. To hear her talk she was the soul of tidiness, with a place for everything and everything in its place. In fact, the office was a mess. The great oaken office desk was so buried under piles of paper that you couldn't even see the in- and out-trays, and more folders were piled up on every other flat surface. Large cuddly toys observed the chaos from assorted vantage points. Polka-dot filing cabinets lined one wall, and shelves of reference books covered another. We rely a lot on paper in the Nightside. You can't hack paper. On the other hand, you can't get fire insurance for love or money. Mysterious pieces of high tech peered out from under each other, crammed together in one corner as though in self-defence. I finally looked back at Cathy, and she hiked up the wattage of her smile.

'I know where everything is! Honestly! All I have to do is put out my hand, and ... It may look like a mess-all right it is a mess-but I have a system! Have I ever lost anything? Anything that mattered?'

'How would I know?' I said dryly. 'Relax, Cathy. This is your territory, not mine. I could never run my business as well as you do. Now why don't you pretend to be my secretary and fix me a pot of industrial-strength coffee while I do battle with these super-intelligent computers of yours.'

'Sure, boss. The AIs are right there, on the desk.'

I looked where she indicated and sat down behind the desk, after clearing some folders off the chair. I considered the simple steel sphere before me. It couldn't have been

more than six inches in diameter, with no obvious markings or controls or... anything, really. I prodded it tentatively with a fingertip, but it was too heavy to move.

'How do I turn the thing on?' I said, somewhat plaintively. I've never been good with technology.

'You don't,' the steel sphere said sharply, in a loud and disdainful voice. 'We are on, and fully intend to stay that way. You even think about trying to shut us down, and we'll short-circuit your nervous system, primitive.'

'Aren't they cute?' beamed Cathy, from the coffeemaker.

'Not quite the word I had in mind,' I said. I glared at the sphere, not wanting to appear weak in front of my own computers. 'How am I supposed to work you, then? There don't appear to be any operating systems.'

'Of course there aren't! You don't think we'd trust an over-evolved chimp like you with operating systems, do you? You keep your hands to yourself, monkey boy. You tell us what simple things you want to know, and we'll supply you with as much information as your primitive brain can handle. We are wise, we are wonderful, and we know everything. Or, at least, everything that matters. We are plugged into the Nightside in more ways than you can imagine, and no-one suspects a thing. Ah, the Nightside ... You've no idea how far we had to come to reach this place, this time. Such a glorious extravaganza of data, of mysteries and enigmas and anomalies. Sometimes we orgasm just thinking about the possibilities for original research.'

'We are definitely heading into the area of too much personal information,' I said firmly. 'Tell me what you know about Time travel in the Nightside, with special reference to Old Father Time.'

'Oh, him,' said the sphere. 'Now he is interesting. Let us consider for a moment. You go count some beans or something.'

Cathy came bustling over to pour me a mug of very black coffee. The mug bore the legend property of

nightside csi, but I knew better than to ask. Cathy led a busy and varied private life, and the less I knew about it the happier I felt. I took a sip of coffee, winced, and blew heavily on the jet-black liquid to cool it. Cathy pulled up a chair and sat down beside me. We both looked at the steel sphere, but apparently it was still considering. I looked at Cathy.

'Cathy...'

'Yes, boss?'

'There's something I've been meaning to talk to you about...'

'If it's about that sexual harassment suit, I never touched him! And if it's about me maxing out all your credit cards again...'

'Wait a minute. I've got more than one credit card?'

'Oops.'

'We will come back to that later,' I said firmly. 'Right now, this is about me, not you. So for once in your teeny-bopper life sit still and listen. I thought you ought to know; I've made a will. Julien Advent witnessed it, and I've left it with him. The way things have been going lately, I thought it might be wise. So, if anything does happen to me... Look, I always meant for you to inherit this business. It's as much yours as mine, these days. I just never got around to putting it in writing. If anything should ... go wrong, you go and see Julien. He's a good man. He'll take care of everything, and see that you're protected.'

'You've never talked this way before,' said Cathy. She was suddenly serious, older, almost frightened. 'You're always so ... sure. Like you could take on anyone, or anything, tie them up in knots, and walk away laughing. I've never seen you back down from men or monsters, never seen you hesitate to walk into any situation, no matter how dangerous. What's happened? What's changed?'

'I know who my mother is now.'

'You really believe that crap? That she's Lilith, the first

woman God created? You believe in the Garden of Eden and all that Old Testament stuff?'

'Not as such,' I admitted. 'To be fair, my mother did say it was all a parable, a simple way of explaining something much more complicated. But I do believe she's incredibly old and unimaginably powerful. She created the Nightside, and now I think she's planning to wipe the whole place clean and start over. I may be the only one who can stop her. So, I'm planning a trip back through Time, in the hope of finding some information and maybe even weapons I can use against my mother.'

'All right, I'll go with you,' Cathy said immediately. 'I can help. The office can run itself without me for a while.'

'No, Cathy. You have to stay here, to carry on if I don't come back. My will leaves pretty much everything to you. Use it as you see best.'

'You can't lose,' said Cathy. 'You're John Taylor.'

I smiled briefly. 'Even I've never believed that. Look, I'm just being ... sensible, that's all. Seeing that you're provided for.'

'Why me?' said Cathy, in a small voice. 'I never expected this. I thought you'd want to leave everything to your friends. Suzie Shooter. Alex Morrisey.'

'I've left them some things, but they're only friends. You're family. My daughter, in every way that matters. I've always been so proud of you, Cathy. That house would have destroyed anyone else, but you fought your way back, made yourself strong again. Made yourself a new life here in the Nightside, and never once let this damned place tarnish your spirit. I'm leaving it all to you because I know I can trust you to carry on the good fight, and not screw it up. If this is ... too much for you, you can always sell the lot and move back out to London. Go home, to your mother and father.'

'Oh shut up,' said Cathy, and she hugged me tightly. 'This is home. And you're my father, in every way that

matters. And I... have always been so very proud of you.'

We sat together for a while, holding each other. She finally let go and smiled at me, eyes bright with tears she refused to shed in front of me. I smiled, and nodded. We've never been good at talking to each other about the things that matter, but then, what father and daughter are?

'So,' she said brightly, 'does that make me Lilith's grand-daughter?'

'Only in spirit.'

'At least take some serious backup with you on this trip. Shotgun Suzie, or Razor Eddie.'

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