One of the other women had called SpecOps 21 and a third had given the Neanderthal a handkerchief to dab his bleeding mouth. I uncuffed Kaylieu and apologised, then sat down and put my head in my hands, wondering what had gone wrong. All the women were called Irma Cohen but none of them would ever know it. Dad said this sort of thing happened all the time.
‘You did
‘I punched a Neanderthal.’
‘Why?’
‘I thought he had a gun on him.’
‘A Neanderthal? With a gun? Don’t be ridiculous!’
‘Granted, it
Victor frowned and I showed him that morning’s copy of
‘
He shrugged.
‘Coincidence. I could make any sentence I wanted from any other clues just as easily. Look here.’
He scanned the answers for a moment.
‘
‘Well—’
He dumped my arrest report in his out-tray.
‘Take my advice, Thursday. Tell them you thought the Neanderthal was a felon, that he reminded you of the bogeyman—
He got up and rubbed his legs. His body was failing him. The hip he had replaced four years ago needed to be replaced. Bowden joined us from where he had been running the copied pages of
‘How does it look?’ I asked.
‘Astounding!’ replied Bowden as he waved a printed report. ‘Ninety-four per cent probability of Will being the author—not even the best fake
‘Did it say who?’
‘Seventy-three per cent likelihood of Fletcher—something that would seem to bear out against historical evidence. Forging Shakespeare is one thing, forging a collaborated work is
There was silence. Victor rubbed his forehead and thought carefully.
‘Okay. Strange and impossible as it might seem, we may have to accept that this is the real thing. This could turn out to be the biggest literary event in history,
‘Since it isn’t in the public domain,’ observed Bowden, ‘Volescamper will have the sole copyright for the next seventy-six years.’
‘Every playhouse on the planet will want to put it on,’ I added, ‘and think of the movie rights.’
‘Exactly,’ said Victor. ‘He’s sitting on not only the most fantastic literary discovery for three centuries but also a keg of purest gold. The question is, how did it languish in his library undiscovered all this time? Scholars have studied there since 1709. How on earth was it overlooked? Ideas, anyone?’
‘Retrosnatch?’ I suggested. ‘If a rogue ChronoGuard operative decided to go back to 1613 and steal a copy he could have a tidy little nest egg on his hands.’
‘SO-12 take retrosnatch very seriously and they assure me that it is
Bowden put out his hand to pick up the phone just as it started to ring.
‘Hello… It’s not, you say? Okay, thanks.’
He put the phone down.
‘The ChronoGuard say not.’
‘How much do you think it’s worth?’ I asked.
‘Hundred million,’ replied Victor, ‘two hundred. Who knows? I’ll call Volescamper and tell him to keep quiet about it. People would kill to even read it. No one else is to know about it, do you hear?’
We nodded our agreement.
‘Good. Thursday, the Network takes internal affairs very seriously. SO-1 will want to speak to you here tomorrow at four about the Skyrail thing. They asked me to suspend you but I told them bollocks so just take some leave until tomorrow. Good work, the two of you. Remember,
We thanked him and he left. Bowden stared at the wall for a moment before saying:
‘The crossword clues bother me, though. If I wasn’t of the opinion that coincidences are merely chance or an overused Dickensian plot device, I might conclude that an old enemy of yours wants to get even.’
‘One with a sense of humour, obviously,’ I told him sullenly.
‘That rules out Goliath, I suppose,’ mused Bowden. ‘Who are you calling?’
‘SO-5.’
I dug Agent Phodder’s card out of my pocket and rang the number. He had told me to call him if ‘an occurrence of unprecedented
‘Hello?’ said a brusque-sounding man after the telephone had rung for a long time.
‘Thursday Next, SO-27,’ I announced. ‘I have some information for Agent Phodder.’
There was a long pause.
‘Agent Phodder has been reassigned.’
‘Agent Kannon, then.’
‘Both Phodder
This was unexpected news. I couldn’t think of anything appropriate to say, so mumbled:
‘I’m sorry to hear that.’
‘Quite,’ said the brusque man, and put the phone down.
‘What happened?’ asked Bowden.
‘Both dead,’ I said quietly.
‘Hades?’
‘Linoleum.’
We sat in silence for a moment.
‘Does Hades have the sort of powers that might be necessary to manipulate coincidences?’ asked Bowden.
I shrugged.
‘Perhaps,’ said Bowden thoughtfully, ‘it
‘Perhaps,’ I said, wishing I could believe it. ‘Oh—I almost forgot. The world’s going to end on the twelfth of December at 20.23.’
‘Really?’ replied Bowden in a disinterested tone. Apocalyptic pronouncements were nothing new to any of