help you, young woman?'
'I am Kelly Anna Sirjan and I have been sent by head office. You were expecting me, I believe.'
'Somewhat earlier, but yes. Would you care for a cup of tea?'
'I would.'
'Splendid. Well Derek here will show you where the tea things are and you can make us all one.'
Kelly Anna shook her head. 'I don't make tea,' she said.
'Well, never mind. We have coffee.'
'Nor coffee.' Kelly Anna shook her head. It was a definite bit of head-shaking. It signified that she definitely didn't make either tea or coffee. Definitely, absolutely, not.
'Ah,' said the editor. 'Ah, well indeed.'
Kelly Anna gave the office a thorough looking-over. It was not a thing of great beauty to behold and she beheld it with distaste.
Beside the window stood the editor's desk, with.the editor behind it. The editor and the editor's desk both looked most untidy. The editor was shabbily dressed in the ruins of a once tweed suit. The desk was a mayhem of papers and books and paper cups and ashtrays and old-fashioned telephones, mostly off the hook. There were pictures on the walls, group shots, framed front pages, yellow with age. And these hung at angles just untrue enough to annoy the fastidious. The carpet 'was grey and bare of thread. Filing cabinets were open and most looked empty within.
'Has there been a robbery?' asked Kelly Anna Sirjan.
'Sorry? What?' The editor glanced all around.
'A robbery,' said Kelly. 'Perhaps someone broke in to steal those unpacked boxes of Mute Corp computer parts. Perhaps they were disturbed during the process and only managed to ransack the office.'
'You are a very rude young woman,' said the editor. 'Dismiss all thoughts of having sex with me.'
The only tidy thing resident to the office made a ghastly swallowing sound and said, 'Please forgive Mr Shields. He's been under a lot of pressure recently. My name is Derek and I am the
Kelly Anna looked at Derek and nodded her golden head. Derek wore a neat grey suit with a pressed white collarless shirt. He was young and tall and slim and handsome with short black hair and emerald eyes. And those eyes looked her full in the face and never once strayed to her breasts.
'Thank you Derek,' said Kelly Anna Sirjan. 'Lady Grey, without sugar.'
'Lady Grey, right.' Derek chewed his bottom lip. 'I might have to send out for that.'
'Well, whatever you have will be fine.'
'Fine. Then if you'll follow me, I'll show you around the building on the way.'
Derek led Kelly Anna from the office and closed the door behind him. The editor sat and fumed at his desk and made a very fierce face.
The face of Periwig Tombs was smiling sweetly. The tour bus was passing the allotments now and Big Bob Charker was singing the praises of Brentford's horti-culturalists.
'Twenty-three different varieties of tomato,' Big Bob said into the microphone. 'Twenty-three different varieties of sprout. And the mighty oak trees at the riverside end are the natural habitat of the lesser spotted grebe and the piebald finch chuck-chuck fiddledum bird.'
'Eh?' went Periwig as he swung the wheel. But his brain was roaring forward.
'Big bare-bottomed bumbly bees,' said the voice of Big Bob Charker. 'Busy busy bumble bees and Walter the Wasp as well.'
'Waspish,' said Kelly Anna Sirjan. 'Waspish, ill-mannered and clearly a misogynist.'
She sat opposite Derek at a window table in the Plume Cafe. The Plume Cafe sat at the top end of the High Street. The Plume Cafe boasted twenty-two different varieties of tea. None of which contained any sprout.
'I thought you'd like it better here than in the staff canteen,' said Derek.
'You mean that cupboard.'
'The staff canteen cupboard, yes. How's the tea?'
Kelly Anna Sirjan sipped her Lady Grey. 'Remarkably good, actually. The filtered water makes all the difference.'
'There's not much you can't get in Brentford if you know where to look.'
'I was talking about your boss, Mr Shields,' said Kelly Anna Sirjan.
'Yes, I know you were.' Derek sipped at his Typhoo. 'He's not a bad man. He's rather fierce and I agree he's something of a misogynist. But I'm afraid that he fears what you might do to the paper.'
'He should fear for his job,' said Kelly. 'Speaking to a complete stranger in the way that he did.'
'He has the job for life. It's written into his contract.'
'Only in Brentford,' said Kelly.
'Yes, you're right about that.'
'But he has nothing to fear from me anyway. I'm not here to change anything. I'm just here to study.'
'You want to learn how the paper's run? There's really not much to it.'
Kelly Anna plucked at her hair and turned smooth strands between her fingers. Backwards, forwards, backwards. 'It's not the paper,' she said. 'It's the town itself. I'm writing a thesis on it for my doctorate. I'm doing an MA in socio-economics. I approached the newspaper publisher at their head office. Told them about the project I had in mind. They put up the finance and arranged for me to come and work at the
'Oh,' said Derek. 'Then Mr Shields has got it all wrong. He thought that you were some kind of troubleshooter from head office sent to shake up the place.'
'That's what head office would like me to do, but I don't want to cause any trouble. You can tell Mr Shields that I won't cause him any trouble.’
Derek smiled, exposing a set of perfect pearly-white teeth. 'Would you mind terribly if I didn't?' he said. 'I've worked at the
Kelly raised an eyebrow. 'You're a naughty boy,' she said.
'Naughty bus,' said Periwig Tombs, struggling with the handbrake. 'I oiled you this morning, don't you get stuck on me now.'
The tour bus was parked at the western tip of the baseline of the Great Brentford Triangle.
'It is popularly believed', came the voice of Big Bob through the speaker system, 'that the city of Manchester has more canals in it than does Venice. This is.not altogether true, although we do have the world's most famous football team. Man U.'
'Eh?' went Periwig Tombs and he turned his head and slid back the little glass panel behind the driver's seat. 'Oi, Bob,' he called, along the deserted lower deck of the bus. 'Have you gone stone bonkers or something? What's all this toot about Man U?'