a duck's call might have sounded something like this: 'Quock, quock'.'
''Quock?' Hardly seems likely.'
'Perhaps you're right,' she replied, switching off the TV and tossing the remote aside. 'What do experts know?'
Like me, Gran was able to jump inside fiction. I wasn't sure how either of us did it but I was very glad that she could — it was she who helped me to not forget my husband, something at one time I was in clear and real danger of doing thanks to Aornis, the mnemonomorph, of course. But Gran had left me about a year ago, announcing that I could fend for myself and she wouldn't waste any more time labouring for me hand and foot, which was a bit of cheek really, as I generally looked after
'Goodness!' I said, looking at her soft and wrinkled skin, which put me oddly in mind of a baby echidna I had once seen in
'What?' she asked sharply.
'Nothing.'
'Nothing? You were thinking of how old I was looking, weren't you?'
It was hard to deny it. Every time I saw her I felt she couldn't look any older, but the next time, with startling regularity, she did.
'When did you get back?'
'This morning.'
'And how are you finding things?'
I brought her up to date with current events. She made 'tut-tutting' noises when I told her about Hamlet and Lady Hamilton, then even louder 'tut-tut' noises when I mentioned my mother and Bismarck.
'Risky business, that.'
'Mum and Bismarck?'
'Emma and Hamlet.'
'He's fictional and she's historical — what could be wrong about that?'
'I was thinking,' she said slowly, raising an eyebrow, 'about what would happen if Ophelia found out.'
I hadn't thought of that, and she was right. Hamlet could be difficult but Ophelia was impossible.
'I always thought the reason Sir John Falstaff retired from policing Elizabethan drama was to get away from Ophelia's sometimes unreasonable demands,' I mused, 'such as having petting animals and a goodly supply of mineral water and fresh sushi on hand at Elsinore whenever she was working. Do you think I should insist Hamlet return to
'Perhaps not right away,' said Gran, coughing into her hanky. 'Let him see what the real world is like. Might do him good to realise it needn't take five acts to make up one's mind.'
She started coughing again so I called the nurse, who told me I should probably leave her. I kissed her goodbye and walked out of the rest home deep in thought, trying to work up a strategy for the next few days. I dreaded to think what my overdraft was like and if I was to catch Kaine I'd be better off inside SpecOps than outside. There were no two ways about it: I needed my old job back. I'd attempt that tomorrow and take it from there. Kaine certainly needed dealing with, and I'd play it by ear at the TV studios tonight. I'd probably have to find a speech therapist for Friday to try to wean him off the Lorem Ipsum, and then, of course, there was Landen. How could I even begin to get someone returned to the here-and-now after they were deleted from the there-and-then by a chroirupt official from the supposedly incorruptible ChronoGuard?
I was jolted from my thoughts as I approached Mum's house. There appeared to be someone partially hidden from view in the alleyway opposite. I nipped into the nearest front garden, ran between the houses, across two back gardens, and then stood on a dustbin to peek cautiously over a high wall. I was right. There
The first man was unarmed so I made sure his unconscious friend was also unarmed — and wasn't going to choke on his blood or teeth or something.
'I know you're not SpecOps,' I observed, 'because you're both way too crap. Goliath?'
The first man got slowly to his feet. He was looking curiously at me, rubbing his arm where I had twisted it. He was a large man but not an unkindly looking one. He had short dark hair and a large mole on his chin. I had broken his spectacles; he didn't look Goliath but I had been wrong before.
'I'm very pleased to meet you, Miss Next. I've been waiting for you for a long, long time.'
'I've been away.'
'Since January 1986. I've waited nearly two and a half years to see you.'
'And why would you do a thing like that?'
'Because,' said the man, producing an identity badge from his pocket and handing it over, 'I am your officially sanctioned stalker.'
I looked at the badge. It was true enough, he was allocated to me. All 100 per cent legit, and I didn't have a say in it. The whole stalker thing was licensed by SpecOps 33, the Entertainments Facilitation Department, which had drawn up specific rules with the Amalgamated Union of Stalkers as to who was allowed to stalk who. It helped to regulate a historically dark business and also graded stalkers according to skill and perseverance. My stalker was an impressive Grade I, the sort who are permitted to stalk the really big celebrities. And that made me suspicious.
'A Grade I?' I queried. 'Should I be flattered? I don't suppose I'm anything above a Grade 8.'
'Not nearly that high,' agreed my stalker, 'more like a Grade 12. But I've got a hunch you're going to get bigger. I latched on to Lola Vavoom in the sixties when she was just a bit part in
'Once, Mr . . .' I looked at the pass before handing it back. '. . . de Floss. Interesting name. Any relation to Candice?'
'The author? In my dreams,' replied the stalker, rolling his eyes. 'But since I'd like us to be friends, do please call me Millon.'
'Millon it is, then.'
And we shook hands. The man on the ground moaned and sat up, rubbing his head.
'Who's your friend?'
'He's not my friend,' said Millon, 'he's my stalker. And a pain in the arse he is too.'
'Wait — you're a stalker and you have a stalker?'
'Of course!' Millon laughed. 'Ever since I published my autobiography,
Before I could stop him he started to recite: