He bowed slightly and went back into the kitchen, where the other knights were sitting on the worktops waiting for him.
âYou're right,' he said. âHe has gone stark raving bonkers.'
âTold you so,' said Turquine. âRight, the way I see it, there's nothing in the book of rules says that you've got to obey a Grand Master who's gone round the twist. I vote we tie him up, chuck him in the cellar and get back to normal.'
Bedevere held up his hand.
âOkay,' he said, âpoint taken, he's acting a bit funny. Butâ'
âA bit funny!' Turquine snorted. âCome on, Bedders, face facts. Young Snotty's finally broken his spring. Had to happen, sooner or later. Trouble with Snotty is, his head's too small for his brain. Leads to an intolerable build-up of pressure, that does, and you end up going potty. I'll just go and get some rope, and...'
Bedevere remained firm. âHold on, Turkey,' he said quietly. âJust because Bo's behaving a bit oddly, that doesn't mean we should abandon the quest, does it, chaps?'
Four pairs of eyebrows lifted as one. Having got their attention, Bedevere slid down off the worktop, helped himself to a biscuit from the jar, and went on.
âWhat I'm getting at,' he said, âis, sooner or later we've got to find the ruddy thing, or we're all going to be here for ever and ever. Right?'
Silence. Bowed heads. Bedevere cleared his mouth of crumbs and continued.
âPrecisely,' he said. âSo, just when we're all getting a bit slack and not really with it any more, what with Nentres going off like that and taking the ... Anyway, who should turn up but young Bo, with this really quite exciting clue thing, and actually knowing what a Grail is, for Heaven's sake. You've got to admit, it gets you wondering. Well, it does me, anyway. Can't be coincidence.'
From the unwonted silence, Sir Bedevere deduced that his colleagues conceded he had a point. He continued briskly.
âWhat I'm trying to get at, chaps, is that, all right, Bo's as potty as they come, but so what? We've got the clue, we know what a Grail is, let's all jolly well go out and look for the blessed thing. And,' he added forcefully, âI for one think the best way to go about it is the way Bo says, splitting up and getting all these socks and things. Must be right,' he said. âThat clue thing said so. Well?'
The knights looked at him shame-faced.
âBut Bedders,' said Pertelope, almost pleading, âhe's barmy.'
âSo was Napoleon,' Bedevere replied.
âNo he wasn't.'
âWell, then,' Bedevere answered, âAlexander the Great, then. Lots of great leaders are a bit funny in the head, well-known fact. That's what makes them great. Not,' he added, âthat I'm saying Bo's great. All I'm saying is, we don't want to make asses of ourselves just because he's an ass. That'd be silly, don't you think?'
Turquine growled. âSo he's let you have the van, has he?' he snarled contemptuously. âTypical.'
Bedevere ignored him. âCome on, chaps,' he said, âlet's vote on it. All those in favour.' Four hands, including his own. âAgainst.' One hand. âThat's settled, then. Go on, Turkey, be a sport.'
âAll right, then,' Turquine grumbled. âJust don't blame me, that's all.'
Bedevere grinned. âCertainly not,' he said, âwe can blame Bo. That,' he said, sagely, âis what leaders are for.'
Â
Â
It was a ship.
Oh good, said Danny Bennett to himself, now I won't have to die after all. What a relief that is.
For the last six days,
ever since
the
pirate-radio ship Imelda Marcos
hit an iceberg and sank, Danny had been wondering whether, career-wise, his sideways move from BBC television into commercial radio had been entirely sensible. On the one hand, he told himself, as he lay on his back in the inflatable dinghy and stared at the sun, I had my own show, complete editorial freedom, unlimited expense account and the chance to develop a whole new approach to radio drama; on the other hand, Bush House didn't start shipping water the moment anything hit it.
In the last few panic-stricken minutes of the ship's life, Danny had been so busy choosing his eight gramophone records that the rest of the crew got fed up waiting for him and shoved off with the lifeboat. To make things worse, there was no portable record player. They don't make them any more, apparently.
And now, just as he was reproaching himself for neglecting to pack any food and water, here was a ship sailing directly towards him. How reassuring, Danny muttered to himself, as he propped his emaciated body up on one elbow and waved feebly. Somebody up there must like me.
The ship drew closer, and a head appeared over the side. âAhoy!' it shouted. âExcuse me, but am I all right for the International Date Line? There hasn't been a signpost or anything for simply ages.'
âHelp,' Danny replied.
âSorry?'
âI said help.'
The head was female, thirtyish, blonde, nice eyes. âFair enough,' it said. âWould you like to buy some unit trusts?'
Danny made a peculiar noise at the back of his throat; imagine the sound of a bathful of mercury emptying away down the plughole, and you might get some idea.
âUnit trusts,' the head repeated. âIt's a very simple idea, really. You pay a capital sum to the fund managers, and they invest your money in a wide range of quoted equities, which...'
âYes,' Danny croaked, âI do know what unit trusts are, thank you very much. Have you got any water?'
The head looked round at the infinite vastness of the sea. âI think there's plenty for everyone,' it said. âWhy?'
âFresh water,' Danny said. âDrinking water.'
âOh,
that
sort. Perrier, stuff like that?'
âIt'd do.'
âSorry, we're right out, all we have is gin. If you're not interested in unit trusts, how about a personal equity plan? There are several really excellent products available at the moment which I would unhesitatingly recommend. For instance...'
âAll right,' Danny said, dragging breath into his lungs, âfood. I haven't eaten for three days.'
âOh.' The head frowned. âDoes that mean you haven't got any money? Because if you don't, I can't see that there's a great deal of point in continuing with this discussion, do you?'
Danny cackled wildly. âI've got plenty of money,' he said. âI've got two years' back pay from Radio Imelda, for a start. What I haven't got isâ'
âA flexible pension scheme tailored to
your
needs and aspirations, I'll be bound,' interrupted the head, nodding. âNow I think I can help you there, because it so happens that I'm an agent for Lyonesse Equitable Life, and there's one particular package ...'
âCan you eat it?'
The head emitted a silvery laugh. âAlternatively,' it went on, âI could do you a very nice index-linked Lyonesse Provident Flexible Annuity Bond, which would provide access to capital as well as a guaranteed rate of income, paid monthly, with a very competitive tax position. Interested?'
Danny shook his head. âMaybe you're missing the point here,' he said. âHere I am, cast adrift in an open boat, dying of hunger and thirst...'
âAh,' said the head, âgot you. What you're really concerned about here is some really constructive inheritance tax planning, possibly involving the creation of an offshore trust. Silly of me not to have realised that before.'
âBut I don't
want
to die,' Danny screamed. Iâ'
âWell,' said the head patiently, âin that case we can adapt the package to allow maximum flexibility by making the fullest possible use of the annual exempt giftable sum. I wish you'd said, by the way. I hate to rush you, but time is money, you know. Now...'
Danny sank back into the dinghy and groaned. The head peered back over the rail at him.
âHello?' it said. âIs that a deal, then?'
âGo away.'
âPardon?'
âI said go away. Bog off. Sink.'
âI don't think I quite heard you. You do want the pension policy, don't you?'
âNo.'
The head looked shocked. âYou
don't?'
âNo.'
âReally?'
âReally.'
âWell!' The head wrinkled its brows. âSuit yourself, then. Look, if you change your mind, you can always fax us on 0553 ...'
Danny rolled over on his face and started to scream; he was still screaming nine hours later, when he was picked up by the captain of an oil tanker. When he told the captain of the tanker about his experiences with the strange ship, the captain nodded grimly.
âI know,' he said, and shuddered. âI've seen it myself. The
Flying Channel-Islander,
we call it.'
Danny was half-dead from dehydration and exposure, but he was still a journalist, and a story is a story. âTell me about it,' he said.
âIt's horrible,' the captain replied, crossing himself. âReally terrible things happen to people who sight her.' He paused, his eyes closed. âTerrible things,' he repeated.
âSuch as?'
âWell,' the captain replied, âsome of them die, some of them go mad, some of them live perfectly normally for five or six years and then run amok with machetes. Some simply vanish. Some of them...'
âYes?'
âSome of them,' said the captain grimly, âeven go and buy the insurance.'
3
Between the town of Giles, to the north of the Tomkinson Range, and Forrest in the Nullarbor Plain, lies the Great Victoria Desert. It is hot, arid, desolate and merciless; and whatever the Creator had in mind when He made it that way, it most certainly wasn't human beings.
It's a really awful place to be if you've got toothache.
âI've got some oil of cloves in my rucksack,' said Sir Pertelope. âSupposed to be very good, oil of cloves. Never seemed to do me any good, mind you, but maybe I'm just over-sensitive to pain.'
âMmmm,' replied his companion.
âThere's some aspirin in the first-aid kit, of course,' Pertelope went on, âbut I wouldn't recommend that, because it's water-soluble, and since we've run out of water ...'
âMmmm.'
âNeedless to say,' Pertelope continued helpfully, âif we found some water it'd be a different matter altogether. But somehow...' He looked up briefly into the steel-blue sky and then turned his head quickly away. âNow my aunt Beatrice used to say that sucking a pebbleâ'
âShut up,' said Sir Lamorak.
Offended, Pertelope shifted his rucksack on his shoulders and pointedly walked a few yards to the east. Then he stopped.
âIf that's north,' he said, pointing due south, âthen England is seventeen thousand miles away over that big jutting rock over there. Fancy that,' he added. He stood for a moment in contemplation; then he shrugged and started to walk; for the record, due west.
They were trying to get to Sydney.
For two men who had alighted from an airliner in Brisbane several months before, this shouldn't have been too great a problem. True, neither of them had been to Australia before, but they had taken the precaution of buying railway tickets, advance-booking their hotels and securing copies of
What's On In Sydney
before leaving England. Their problems had started at Brisbane Airport, when Pertelope had left the little bag containing all the paperwork behind on the airport bus.
No problem, Pertelope had explained. All we have to do is hitch a lift. The Australians are a notoriously friendly, hospitable people who take pleasure in helping travellers in distress.
Sixteen hours along the road, they had indeed managed to hitch a ride on a truckful of newly slaughtered carcases as far as St George, where the lorry driver had finally thrown them forcibly from the cab after Pertelope had insisted on singing
Vos Quid Admiramini
in his usual nasal drone. After a short pause to regroup and eat the last of the bag of mint imperials that Lamorak had bought at Heathrow, they had set out to walk as far as Dirranbandi. It's hard to explain concisely how they came to be thirteen hundred miles off course; the best that can be done without embarking on a whole new book is to explain that in the back of Sir Pertelope's National Trust Diary was a map of the world; and that although Pertelope had heard about Columbus and the curvature of the earth, he had never been entirely convinced. The central premise of his navigational theory, therefore, was that the centre of the world lay at Jerusalem, and that maps had to be interpreted accordingly.