I arrived home just in time to rescue Mother from having to make more tea for Friday.
'Eight fish fingers!' she muttered, shocked by his greed. 'Eight!'
'That's nothing,' I replied, putting my pay cheque into a novelty teapot and tickling Friday on the ear. 'You wait until you see how many beans he can put away.'
'The phone's been ringing all day. Aubrey somebody or other about death threats or something?'
'I'll call him. How was the zoo?'
'Ooh!' she cooed, touched her hair and tripped out of the kitchen. I waited until she was gone then knelt down close to Friday.
'Did Bismarck and Gran . . . kiss?'
'
'I hope that's a 'definitely not', darling,' I murmured, filling up his beaker. As I did so I caught my wedding ring on the lip of the cup, and I stared at it in a resigned manner. Landen was back again. I clasped it tightly and picked up the phone and dialled.
'Hello?' came Landen's voice.
'It's Thursday.'
'Thursday!' he said with a mixture of relief and alarm. 'What happened to you? I was waiting for you in the bedroom and then I heard the front door close! Did I do something wrong?'
'No, Land, nothing. You were eradicated again.'
'Am I still?'
'Of course not.'
There was a long pause. Too long, in fact. I looked at my hand. My wedding ring had gone again. I sighed, replaced the receiver and went back to Friday, heavy of heart.
I called Aubrey as I was giving Friday his bath and tried to reassure him about the missing players. I told him to keep training and I'd deliver. I wasn't sure how, but I didn't tell him that. I just said it was 'in hand'.
'I have to go,' I told him at last. 'I've got to wash Friday's hair and I can't do it with one hand.'
That evening, as I was reading
He worked very closely with us at Jurisfiction, where he was in charge of the Great Library, a cavernous and almost infinite depository of every book ever written. But to call the Cat a librarian would be an injustice. He was an Uberlibrarian — he knew about all the books in his charge. When they were being read, by whom — everything. Everything, that is, except where Yorrick Kaine was a featured part. Friday giggled and pointed as the Cat stopped appearing and stared at us with a grin etched on his features, eagerly listening to the story.
'Hello!' he said as soon as I had finished, kissed Friday and put out the bedside light. 'I've got some information for you.'
'About?'
'Yorrick Kaine.'
I took the Cat downstairs, where he sat on the microwave as I made some tea.
'So what have you found out?'
'I've found out that an alligator isn't someone who makes allegations — it's a large reptile a bit like a crocodile.'
'I mean about Kaine.'
'Ah. Well, I've had a careful trawl and he doesn't appear anywhere in the character manifests either in the Great Library or the Well of Lost Plots. Wherever he's from, it isn't from published fiction, poetry, jokes, non-fiction or knitting patterns.'
'I don't believe you'd come out here to tell me you've failed, Chesh,' I said. 'What's the good news?'
The Cat's eyes flashed and he twitched his whiskers.
'Vanity publishing!' he announced with a flourish.
It was an inspired guess. I'd never even considered he might be from there. The realm of the self-published book was a bizarre mix of quaint local histories, collections of poetry,
'You're sure?'
The Cat handed me an index card.
'I knew this was important to you so I called in a few favours.'
I read the card aloud.
'
1 looked at the Cat. Daphne Farquitt. Writer of nearly five hundred romantic novels and darling of the Romance genre.
'Before she was famous writing truly awful books she used to write truly awful books that were self- published,' explained the Cat. 'In
'Can you get me into the vanity publishing library?' I asked.
'There is no vanity library,' the Cat said with a shrug. 'We have figures and short reviews gleaned from vanity publishers' manifests and
He grinned again but I didn't join him.
'Not that easy, Cat. Take a look at this.'
I showed him the latest issue of
'I don't get it,' said the Cat, placing a yearning paw on a Moggilicious Cat Food advert, 'what's he up to burning all her books?'
'Because,' I said, 'he obviously can't find all the original copies of
There was a long pause.
'I give up,' said the Cat, 'where would you hide a stick?'
'In a forest.'
I stared out of the window thoughtfully.
'Why would you hide a stick in a forest?' asked the Cat, who had been pondering this question for some moments in silence.
'It's an analogy,' I explained. 'Kaine needs to get rid of every copy of
'Got it.'
'Good.'