‘DH-82,
Her anger was directed at a small Tasmainan tiger that had been nosing the remains of some chicken on the table edge.
‘Bad boy!’ she added in a scolding tone. The Tasmainan tiger looked crestfallen, sat on its blanket by the Aga and stared down at its paws.
‘Rescue Thylacine,’ explained my mother. ‘Used to be a lab animal. He smoked forty a day until his escape. It’s costing me a fortune in nicotine patches. Isn’t it, DH-82?’
The small re-engineered native of Tasmania looked up and shook his head. Despite being vaguely dog- shaped this species was more closely related to a kangaroo than to a Labrador. You always expected one to wag its tail, bark or fetch a stick, but they never did. The closest behavioural similarities were a propensity to steal food and an almost fanatical devotion to tail-chasing.
‘I miss your dad a lot, you know,’ said my mother wistfully. ‘How—’
There was a loud explosion, the lights flickered and something shot past the kitchen window.
‘What was that?’ said my mother.
‘I think,’ replied Landen soberly, ‘it was Aunt Polly.’
We found her in the vegetable patch dressed in a deflating rubber suit that was meant to break her fall but obviously hadn’t—she was holding a handkerchief to a bloodied nose.
‘My goodness!’ exclaimed my mother. ‘Are you okay?’
‘Never been better!’ she replied, looking at a stake in the ground and then yelling. ‘Seventy-five yards!’
‘Righty-on!’ said a distant voice from the other end of the garden. We turned to see my Uncle Mycroft, who was consulting a clipboard next to a smoking Volkswagen convertible.
‘Car seat ejection devices in case of road accidents,’ explained Polly, ‘with a self-inflating rubber suit to cushion the fall. Pull on a toggle and
‘Of course.’
We helped her to her feet and she trotted off, seemingly none the worse for her expenence.
‘Mycroft still inventing, then?’ I said as we walked back inside to discover that DH-82 had eaten all the vol-au-vents, the main course
‘DH!’ Mum said crossly to the guilty-looking and very bloated Tas tiger, ‘that was
‘How about Thylacine cutlets?’ suggested Landen.
I elbowed him in the ribs and Mum pretended not to hear.
Landen rolled up his sleeves and searched through the kitchen for something to rustle up. All of the cupboards were full of tinned pears.
‘Have you anything apart from canned fruit, Mrs… I mean, Wednesday?’
Mum stopped trying to chastise DH-82, who, soporific through gluttony, had settled down for a long nap.
‘No,’ she admitted. ‘The man in the shop said there would be a shortage so I bought his entire stock.’
I walked down to Mycroft’s laboratory, knocked and, when there was no reply, entered. All his machines had been dismantled and now lay about the room, tagged and carefully stacked. Mycroft himself, having obviously finished testing the ejection system, was now tweaking a small bronze object. He seemed somewhat startled when I spoke his name but relaxed as soon as he saw it was me.
‘Hello, love!’ he said kindly. ‘I’m off on retirement in one hour and nine minutes. You looked good on the telly last night.’
‘Thank you. What are you up to, Uncle?’
He handed me a large book.
‘Enhanced indexing. In a Nextian dictionary, godliness
I opened the book to look up ‘trout’ and found it on the first page I came to.
‘Saves time, eh?’
‘Yes; but—’
Mycroft had moved on.
‘Over here is a Lego filter for vacuum cleaners. Did you know that over a million pounds’ worth of Lego is hoovered up every year, and a total often thousand man-hours are wasted sorting through the dust bags?’
‘I didn’t know that, no.’
‘This device will sort any sucked-up bits of Lego into colours or shapes, according to how you set this knob here.’
‘Very impressive.’
‘This is just hobby stuff. Come and look at some
He beckoned me across to a blackboard, its surface covered with a jumbled mass of complicated algebraic functions.
‘This is Polly’s hobby, really. It’s a new form of mathematical theory that makes Euclid’s work seem like little more than long division. We have called it Nextian geometry. I won’t bother you with the details but watch this.’
Mycroft rolled up his shirtsleeves and placed a large ball of dough on the workbench and rolled it out into a flat ovoid.
‘Scone dough,’ he explained. ‘I’ve left out the raisins for purposes of clarity. Using conventional geometry a round scone cutter always leaves waste behind, agreed?’
‘Agreed.’
‘Not with Nextian geometry! You see this pastry cutter? Circular, wouldn’t you say?’
‘Perfectly circular, yes.’
‘Well,’ carried on Mycroft in an excited voice, ‘it isn’t. It
And so saying he deftly cut the dough into twelve perfectly circular shapes with no waste. I frowned and stared at the small pile of discs, not quite believing what I had just seen.
‘How—?’
‘Clever, isn’t it?’ He chuckled. ‘But quite, quite simple, really. A baked-bean tin is circular, wouldn’t you say?’
I nodded.
‘But viewed from the
‘It
‘We didn’t know the nature of lightning or rainbows for three and a half million years, pet. Don’t reject it just because it
‘Wait!’ I interrupted ‘How does a Thermos fit in with that little lot?’
‘Because, my dear girl, no one has the least idea
‘Yes.’
‘Well,
‘Okay, okay, Uncle—how about applications for Nextian geometry?’
‘Hundreds. Packaging and space management will be revolutionised overnight. I can pack Ping-Pong balls in a cardboard box without any gaps, punch steel bottle tops with no waste, drill a square hole, tunnel to the moon, divide cake more efficiently, and also—and this is the most exciting part—