I knocked on the door and three voices called out from within — “Come!”
It was a small office, its centerpiece a long ebony desk at which sat three men in Victorian black. Behind them was a jade-green door — and what lay beyond that door, I wished fervently never to know. Just at the sight of it, I knew that I’d give absolutely anything never to have to pass beyond it.
But I wasn’t the only visitor. Sitting with his back to me, hunched and chastened, slouched in his chair and sipping miserably at a cup of tea, was Joe Streater.
The first of the men looked up as I came in. He spoke with a cut-glass English accent, like an aristocrat in a comedy sketch. “Who are you exactly?”
“Oh, I’m nobody special.”
The man next to him looked up at me. When he spoke it was with an Irish lilt. “But who are yer?”
“Just a filing clerk.”
When a third man spoke it was in a thick Scots brogue. “Ye don’t seem tae be affected by the snow.”
“I want some answers,” I said, trying to be bullish. “People are dying out there and I need to understand what’s going on.”
“We’re a transparent organization,” said the Englishman. “Ask us anything you wish.”
“Why is this place an office?”
“Naturally, we’re an office. Peripatetic, perhaps, but an office nonetheless. It was only a branch which was trapped on Earth. On its release, Head Office was summoned and I’m delighted to report that they’ve arrived most promptly.”
“I’ve waited years tae see this place,” said the Scotsman, “and I have tae say I’m not disappointed.”
“It’s an office,” I said again, redundantly. “Leviathan’s a bloody office.”
The Irishman shrugged. “What were yer expecting?”
“I was expecting something monstrous.”
“Ah, but we are monstrous.” The Irishman laughed. “Monstrously successful.”
The Scotsman glowered in my direction. “Leviathan Corporation is by far the largest and most successful archive and storage business in the knoon universe.”
“Archive and storage?” I said. “You’re not serious?”
“Storage is a universal problem, laddie.”
“So?”
The Englishman smiled. “Leviathan offers the solution. We find a planet with the right kind of environment, where the indigenous population has physiognomies capable of sustaining our kind of information, and we simply download it into their systems. Most planets in this part of the galaxy are annexed to the needs of Leviathan.”
I stared at them in horrified disbelief. “That’s what all this has been about? You’re storing information in people? You’re using human beings as living files?”
The Englishman smiled. “You hew down trees for paper. The principle is the same.”
“How can you be a party to this? You’re the same as us. You’re human beings.”
The Scotsman shrugged. “Just between you and me, Mr. Lamb, there’s nae much of us that you could really call human any more.”
For the first time since I had entered the room, Joe Streater spoke up, his voice weedy and pathetic. “You said you’d make me a hero. You promised me you’d set me up amongst the gods.”
I couldn’t help myself at this, couldn’t stop myself from laughing.
Joe turned his sharp little face in my direction. “What’s so funny?”
“You won’t be a god,” I gasped. “You’ll be a filing clerk.”
The Scotsman shook his head. “You’ve let us doon, Joseph. The prince has nae been persuaded tae our way of thinkin’.”
“He was getting help!” Streater protested. “Course I see that now.”
Just to add to the sense that this was a peculiar dream, packed with people you haven’t thought about in years and face you half recognize from the telly, the door behind me was thrown open and the heir to the throne strode thunderously in.
The Englishman spread his hands in oleaginous welcome. “Good afternoon, sir. We’re delighted you could join