“Hello, Tristram,” I said. “You’re looking … well, a lot better than the last time I saw you.”
“Hello, John,” said Count Video, sitting easily on one end of Mr. Alexander’s desk. “Not many people get to see me these days. Everyone thinks I’m dead, and I like it that way. Operating in secret, in the shadows, behind the scenes. You see, after what happened to me during the angel war, I had something of an epiphany. No more messing around with magical theory and forbidden knowledge; I wanted all the good things the world has to offer, and I wanted them now, while I was still able to appreciate them. So now I work secretly, for the highest bidder, and I don’t care what I do as long as it pays well. Does that make me sound shallow? Well, I find having your skin ripped off concentrates the mind wonderfully on what really matters.”
“Tell me what you’ve been doing to Eamonn,” I said. “You know you want to.”
“Don’t mind if I do,” said Count Video, settling himself comfortably as he switched to lecture mode. “For everyone else, alternative timetracks are only theory. But to me, every time-line is as real as any other. I see them all, flowing past me like so many rivers, and I can dip a toe into any of them I please. Sometimes I go fishing, and pull out all kinds of strange and useful things. Like all those variant editions of Eamonn Mitchell. All the people he was and might have been, if only things had gone a little differently. I scattered them across the Nightside, armed them with wands charged by my probability magic, and sent them after your client. Most never got to him, of course. The Nightside is such a dangerous and distracting place.”
“Yes, but why wands?” I said.
Count Video shrugged. “When dealing with amateurs, keep it simple.”
“And there’s no way I can persuade you to walk away from this?” I said.
“Not at what I’m being paid. And you needn’t look at me that way, John. You’re not powerful enough to stop me, and you know it. I have seen your futures, and in most of them you’re dead.”
“Most isn’t all,” I said. “And you really should have looked more closely at my past, Tristram. I’m not what everyone thinks I am.”
He heard the threat in my voice and stood up abruptly, pulling his power about him. Plasma lights sparked and scintillated all around him, and the sorcerous circuitry embedded in his flesh glowed with an eerie light. Anyone else would probably have been impressed. But for all his magic, Count Video was really quite limited. All his power came from the terrible technology implanted in his body by the Transient Being known as the Engineer, and Tristram had never really appreciated its potential. He used it to see possible futures, like a video junky flipping endlessly from one channel to another. That was how he got his name. And with all those other Eamonns out there in the Nightside, draining his energy, he had to be running low on power by now. All I had to do was keep him busy, and his clockwork would run down.
Assuming he didn’t manage to kill me first, of course.
He laughed suddenly, a happy, breathless sound. He flexed his hands, and the whole office disappeared in a moment, replaced by a craggy mountainside under an erupting volcano. The heat was overwhelming, the air almost too hot to breathe. Lava streams flowed down the cracked mountainside, cherry red and steaming, and blazing cinders flew through the air. But my gift was strong in me, too, and I could See the office behind the volcano. I found my way back to the office, and the volcano timetrack disappeared, snapped off in a moment, like the changing back of a channel. I took a step towards Count Video, and the office was gone again, and we were standing on a bare stone plain, surrounded by huge iron monoliths. Lightning cracked down repeatedly from an overcast sky, and slow misshapen things emerged from behind the monoliths, dragging themselves across the grey plain towards us. But I found the office again, and the plain and everything on it disappeared. I took another step towards Count Video.
He actually spat at me, shaking with rage. “How dare you set your will against mine? I’ll find a time-line where you have no gift! Where you were born crippled, or blind, or maybe never born at all!”
And while he was ranting I stepped forward and kicked him in the balls. His mouth dropped open, his eyes bulged, and he folded up and collapsed, to lie twitching on the floor.
“I guess they must have sewed those back on as well,” said Tommy.
“It seemed likely,” I said. “When we’re finished, I think I’ll drag him out of here and find a passing Timeslip to drop him into. That should keep him busy for a while.”
“Still trying to be the Good Guy?” said Tommy.
And that was when Count Video reared up just long enough to fire one last blast of change magic at me. I threw myself to one side, and the crackling change flew on to hit Mr. Alexander squarely on the chest. There was a bright flare of light, and suddenly Mr. Alexander looked… different. Physically unchanged, he looked calmer and kinder and more relaxed with himself. He smiled at me, and it was a warm, generous smile. Somehow I knew he was a better person now, someone he might have been if things had gone a little differently.
“I’m so sorry,” he said, and we could all tell he meant it. “How can I ever apologize to you all?” He came out from behind his desk and insisted we all help Count Video to his feet, then settle him into the expensive chair behind his desk. He even poured Count Video a stiff whiskey from a bottle of the good stuff he kept in a desk drawer. Finally, he looked at me, and at Tommy, and finally Eamonn, before shaking his head ruefully.
“Please relax, all of you. It’s over. The man who started this nonsense is gone, hopefully never to return. I intend to do things differently. I shall put a stop to this operation and see that none of you are troubled again. I feel… so much easier in myself now. You have no idea how much stress is involved in being the bad guy. Most of that man’s memories are going, fading away like a bad dream, and I’m happy to see them go. Let me reassure you, Eamonn; I will make the Widow’s Mite into the kind of Corporation we can both be proud of. And you are free to be … whatever you want to be.”
Tommy looked at me. “This is really spooky. I feel like I’ve wandered into A Christmas Carol.”
Mr. Alexander patted Count Video fondly on the shoulder. “Take it easy, dear boy. You can leave whenever you want. Your work here is over.”
“The hell it is,” Count Video said painfully. “This isn’t over until I say it’s over.”
Mr. Alexander took a cheque from his wallet and gave it to Count Video. “Here. Payment in full, for services rendered.”
Count Video considered the cheque in his hand, then looked at me. I raised an eyebrow, and he winced.
“All right, it’s over.”
He lurched to his feet, shrugging off a helping hand from Mr. Alexander, and walked painfully over to the door. He pulled it open, then looked back at me.
“I’m not finished with you, Taylor.”
“I know,” I said. In the future, you will be one of my Enemies, and try to kill me, for the good of the Nightside.
And that was it, really. We all had a nice sit-down and a chat with the new and improved Mr. Alexander, who couldn’t do enough for us. He even presented all of us with generous cheques of our own. Eamonn had to be persuaded to accept his, but Tommy and I had no problem with it. We certainly weren’t going to be paid by anyone else.
“Don’t you love a happy ending?” I said to Tommy.
“Well, it depends what you mean by happy, and by ending,” the existential detective began.
“Oh shut up,” I said.
We all said our good-byes to Mr. Alexander, and left the Widow’s Mite building. Tommy and I escorted Eamonn back through the Nightside streets to the underground station, so he could finally return to London and his precious family. We did try to interest him in trying some of the Nightside’s tamer delights, just for the experience, but he refused to be tempted. He was going home, and that was all he cared about. We finally stood together outside the entrance to the tube station.
“Well,” h
e said. “It’s been… interesting, I suppose. Thank you both for all your help. I don’t know what I would have done without you. But I trust you’ll forgive me if I say I hope I’ll never see you again.”
“Lot of people feel that way about me,” I said, and Tommy nodded solemnly.
“It was strange,” said Eamonn. “Seeing all those other mes, the people I used to be, and the men I might have become. They were all very passionate about who they were, and what they wanted, but none of them seemed particularly happy, did they? I’m happy, in my quiet little life. I have my Andrea, and my children; and perhaps that’s what true happiness is. Knowing what really matters to you.”
He smiled briefly, insisted on shaking hands one last time, then he went down the steps into the Underground, and in a moment he was lost to sight among the crowd—a man going home, like so many others.
“There goes, perhaps, the wisest of us all,” I said to Tommy, and he nodded. I considered him thoughtfully. “I am planning a trip through Time, all the way back to the very beginnings of the Nightside. We seem to work well enough together. If I can talk Old Father Time into this, would you like to come along?”
“What’s the catch?” said Tommy.
I had to smile. “The catch? The catch is, it’s hideously dangerous, and we’ll probably end up killed!”
“Ah,” said Tommy Oblivion. “The usual.”
Chapter Five
A Parade of Possibilities
The Nightside is a dark and dangerous place, but I’ve always felt at home there, like I belonged. If only as one more monster among many. So it came as something of a surprise to me when Tommy Oblivion and I went walking through the crowded streets and found the tenor of the times was definitely changing. The crowd was jittery, like cattle before a thunderstorm, and the air was hot and close as a fever room. The raised voices of the club barkers and the come-on men sounded that little bit more desperate, and everywhere I looked the Merchants of Doom—the shabby men with burning eyes, preaching and prophesying and bellowing their proclamations of Bad Times coming—were out in force. One man barged sullenly through the crowds, wearing a sandwich board with the message the end bloody well is nigh. I had to smile. Many of the self-styled prophets recognized me, and made the sign of the cross at me. Some made the sign of the extremely cross, and shook hand-made charms and fetishes at me.
And then the crowd immediately ahead suddenly scattered, falling back every which way as a manhole cover slid jerkily to one side. Thick blue smoke belched up from underneath the street, lying low and heavy on the ground like early-morning mist. People recoiled from the stench, coughing and rubbing at smarting eyes. Even at a distance the smell was distressing, dark and organic, like dead things pushing their way up out of newly turned earth. And up out of the manhole squeezed and crawled a whole series of faintly glowing creatures, so twisted and misshapen it was hard to be sure they were even all the same species. Their flesh was a grubby white shot with raised purple veins, mobile and half-melting, slipping and sliding around their underlying structure. They might have been human once, long ago, but now the only real resemblance left was in their puffy faces, blue-white like spoiled cheese and speckled with rot. Their eyes were huge and dark, and they did not blink. More and more of them spilled out onto the pavement, and everywhere people pushed back to give them plenty of room. And every single one of these creatures headed straight for me.
I stood my ground. I had a reputation to maintain, and besides, it’s never wise to turn your back on an unknown enemy. They looked too soft and squishy to do me any real harm, but I didn’t underestimate them either. Defenceless things don’t tend to last long in the Nightside, and these things looked like they’d been around for a while. The smell grew steadily worse as they slumped across the ground towards me. I gave them my best cold glare and slipped one hand into my coat pocket, where I kept several items of a useful and destructive nature. Tommy stood his ground, just behind me.
“Do you know what those things are?” he said quietly.
“Disgusting, with a side order of utterly gross,” I said. “Otherwise, no.”
“What do you suppose they want with you?”
“Nothing that involves getting too familiar, hopefully. I’ve just had this coat cleaned.”
The glowing creatures lined up in ranks before me, bobbing and pulsating, their corrupt flesh oozing all over each other; and then, at some unheard signal, they all bowed their dripping heads to me.
“Hail to thee, proud Prince of Catastrophe and Apocalypse,” said the creature closest to me, in a thick gurgling voice. It sounded like someone drowning in their own vomit, and close up the smell was almost overwhelming. “We hear things, in the dark, in the deeps, and so we come to pay homage. Remember us, we pray thee, when thou dost come into thy heritage.”
They hung before me for a while, bobbing their raised heads and sliding across one another, as though waiting for some response. I said nothing, and eventually they all turned away, slithered back across the enslimed pavement, and disappeared back down the manhole. The last one pulled the manhole cover back into place over them, and the blue ground fog slowly began to disperse, though the rotten smell still lingered on the air. There was a pause, then the watching crowd dispersed, everyone going about their business as though nothing unusual had occurred. It’s not easy to shock hardened Nightsiders. Tommy sniffed loudly.
“You know, old horse, I wouldn’t work in the sewers here for any amount of money. What do you suppose that was all about?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “But it’s been happening more and more recently. Word about my mother’s identity must be getting around.”
Tommy considered the manhole cover thoughtfully. “Is it possible they know something you don’t?”
“Wouldn’t be difficult. Let’s go.”
We walked on, leaving the smell and the blue mists behind us. Everyone seemed to be moving just a little faster than normal, and the pace of life seemed that little bit more frantic. As though everyone had the feeling time might be running out. The club barkers were out in force, striding up and down outside the entrances to their members-only establishments. Bouncers whose job it was to throw the customers in. They shouted their wares, tempting and cajoling the passing trade like there was no tomorrow. Come in and see the lovely ladies! one checker-suited man shouted at us as we passed. They’re dead and they dance! I wasn’t tempted. There were street traders, too, dozens of them, selling all kinds of goods at all kinds of prices. One particularly furtive specimen in a knockoff Armani jumpsuit was selling items from possible futures, all kinds of junk sold by people who’d blundered into the Nightside via a Timeslip and needed to raise some quick cash. I paused to inspect the contents of the open suitcase. I’ve always been a sucker for unique items.
I knelt and rooted through the stuff. There was a Beta-max video of the 1942 Casablanca, starring Ronald Reagan, Boris Karloff, and Joan Crawford. A thick paperback gothic romance, Hearts in Atlanta by Stephanie King. A plasma energy rifle from World War IV. (Batteries not included.) A gold pocket watch with butter in the works, and a cat that could disappear at will, leaving behind nothing but its smile. It said its name was Maxwell, but not to spread it around.
And that was just the stuff I recognised. Many of the items acquired from future travellers turn out to be technology so advanced or obscure that what they’re for or even what they do is anybody’s guess. Buyer beware; but then that’s business as usual in the Nightside.
There was a tiny armchair, backed by a big brass wheel, with a bent cigar sitting in it, some kind of glowing lens, and a small black box that shook and growled menacingly when you tried to turn it on. The trader was very keen to hawk a philosopher’s stone that could turn lead into gold, but I’d encountered it before. The stone could transmute the elements all right, but the changing atomic weight meant you ended up with extremely radioactive gold. A man kneeling beside me held up a phial full of a shimmering rainbow liquid.
/> “What does this do?” he challenged the trader, who grinned cheerfully.
“That, squire, is your actual immortality serum. One sip, and you live forever.”
“Oh come on!” said the doubtful buyer. “Can you prove it?”
“Sure; drink it and live long enough to find out. Look, squire, I only sell the stuff. And before you ask, no, I don’t do guarantees. I don’t even guarantee I’ll be here tomorrow. Now if you’re not going to buy, make room for someone who will.” He looked hopefully at me. “How about you, sir? You look like a man who knows a bargain when he sees one.”
“I do,” I admitted. “And I also know the Borealis Accelerator when I see it. One sip of that stuff will make you immortal, but I have read the small print that usually accompanies the phial. The bit that says, Drink me and you’ll live forever. You’ll be a frog, but you’ll live forever.”
The other customer quickly dropped the phial back into the suitcase, and hurried away. The street trader shrugged, not bothered. He knew there’d be another sucker along in a moment. “Well, how about this, squire? A jet pack you strap on your back. Fly like a bird, only without all that onerous flapping of arms. It glides, it soars, and, no, it doesn’t come with a parachute.”
A young man pushed forward, eager to try it out, and I made room for him. The trader haggled cheerfully over a down payment, then strapped the hulking steel contraption to the young man’s back. The two of them studied the complicated control panel for a while, then the young man shrugged and stabbed determinedly at the big red button in the centre. The jet pack blasted up into the night at speed, dragging the young man along with it, his legs kicking helplessly. His voice came drifting desperately down.
“How do I steer the bloody thing?”