England
was not yet an anarchist utopia, but under Larry’s random and light pawed
guidance it was becoming co-operative. Its people were quietly becoming self reliant,
involved and innovative – and in some small way, happy.
Superficially
Limehousesailortown was unchanged.
Steamers, clippers and tramps still jostled for a place at the quayside;
bars, stews and music halls still spewed rowdy, boisterous, swaying parties of
intoxicated matelots out onto the narrow streets; ships’ cats still slunk in
and out of dingy catnip dens.
Homesick seafarers still sought temporary solace in companionable,
rentable substitutes for their dimly remembered mothers and sweethearts; but
somewhere along the line the claustrophobic alleyways had lost their edginess.
The
penthousebedsit was pretty much the same as well. A kettle whistled on the range, the little black and
white TV set was showing Land and Freedom – its brown Bakelite case had become
loose and an eerie mauve glow escaped around the cathode ray tube. Monochrome posters of Ernesto
Guevara and Albert Camus eyed each other from opposing walls. Ginsbergbear was lounging in an
old armchair, feet up on the mantelpiece and catnip shag dangling from an as
yet unlit Peterson briar, Boz was trying to concentrate on the latest, slightly
crumpled, copy of International Catnip Times whilst Phoebles pointed out good
bits that he had written and Ferdy, having warmed the teapot, was toasting
pikelets under a small gas grill.
The pals were relaxing between adventures when…
There
came a coded rap on the door.
Phoebles opened it and Slasher McGoogs was standing before him. He was wearing a pair of St
Michael’s aertex Y-fronts over a cerise spandex hooded one-piece. The hood formed a close fitting
mask over his upper face and a serpentine gilded S was emblazoned on his chest.
“B****r
me!” expleted Boz.
Ferdy
raised an eyebrow, “I know the nation’s dress code is somewhat more relaxed
under Larry’s leadership,” He glanced pointedly at Phoebles’ voluminous
Smarty-spotted trousers and rainbow bracers, “but surely there are still
limits.”
“It’s
not easy, suddenly finding you’re a superhero after all those years of covert
operating.” Slasher stalked
into the room and perched on the edge of the dining table.
“Er,
I’m not sure the table is all that sturdy.” Boz warned, but Slash ignored him.
“Turn
up the sound on the telly, I don’t want to be overheard.” He could barely be heard at all
as the film climaxed in a crescendo of gunfire and Spanish shouting.
“My
contacts within the Aldershot Ghurkha Community warn of rumours from their
homeland that the Merovingian Lizard Kings are on the move and strange discs
have been seen in the sky above the mountain peaks. Agents in the north report of Reivers raiding south of
the wall, and Les Chats Souterrains have been seen mingling amongst the
revellers at the Castleton Goth Festival – Speedwell Cavern has been closed to
the public. Corsairs aboard
black whale hunters with 40mm Bofors or twin 12.7mm DShK’s mounted on the prow
have been hi-jacking Arctic Coleyfishtrawlers and holding their cargo’s to
ransom!”
Boz
gasped. “Coleyfish pirates? Destitute fishmongers? A coleyfish famine? This is a disaster!” Ferdy tried to calm him.
Ginsbergbear had not really been paying
attention during the exchange and was idly flicking channels on the old
TV. Up popped the DOG
CHANNEL.
“In
lill ole England during the terrible insurgency against democracy their prime
minister and some of his aids were cut off and surrounded by drug crazed and
heathen anarchists. Knowing
that if they were captured they would be tortured horribly, in ways I cannot
describe on television, they determined to take their own lives rather than be
captured. As the screaming
demons closed in yelling their blood curdling war cry and the English Gentlemen
prepared to meet their end, the baying horde suddenly stopped, stunned into silence,
and knelt in prayer. The
astounded British ministers looked about and over them stood DOG in Glory,
glowing pink and gold.
And
DOG spake, ‘Let my people be!’
“Needless
to say, the terrorists fled.
“Although
the forces of Anarchy and Atheism are currently in the ascendant, DOG and
Democracy will one day prevail.
The Army of DOG is being assembled and we need your donations. For every $ we receive an amount
will be put towards armbands, stickers and Boneos. Contribute today. Support the cause.”
“More
trouble.” Mused Ginsbergbear.
“Don’t
worry about them,” said Slasher, “They’re too busy fleecing their own to really
bother us. The true danger
lurks in the caves of Derbyshire.”
Phoebles was aghast. “You expect us to take on the
Merovingian Lizard Kings, the Dark Lords of myth, the shades behind all that is
twisted in the world? Isn’t
that a bit ambitious?”
“Just
a little nibble at the trouser cuffs of their ambition, a tentative toe into
the custard bowl of Machiavellian malevolence. See what we can stir up.” McGoogs’ eyes blazed behind the mask. Ginsbergbear had begun to pay
attention and Boz swallowed, “We can’t just sit back and do nothing – the
coleyfish.”
Downstairs,
the lounge-bar was all but empty – two worn out Kittens of Chaos were recovering along
a red plush chaise longue over hookahs and tiny cups of treacle-black Monsoon
Malabar, Sam was mangling a boogie-woogie improv, flat fingered across the
tobacco stained ivories of an aging upright, smoke-grey derby pushed to the
back of his head, striped shirt with white collar and cuffs folded back from
the bony wrists, breakfast stained flannel waistcoat ruckling as he played.
“Your
usual, boys?”
Dark
Flo was doing service behind the bar. She was slight and pallid with sunken eyes and raven hair that
hung about her face like dead crows on barbed wire; waif-like, vulnerable and
yet hard as black-iron nails.
She could pull a perfect pint, Yorkshire head judged to the millimetre,
with one hand tied behind her back and the other skewered to the bar by a Bowie
knife. She might dispense or
relish pain with equal measure, quell a riot with her contortions at the pole, or
empty the bar with a single, gentle command. For now she pulled pints of tawny London Porter and
served them up with Talisker chasers. Before Slasher McGoogs she assembled a shot glass of
Tres Amigos Anejos, saltcellar and a half lemon on a cracked white bone china
saucer.
Phoebles and Boz moved over to their favoured table in
the bay that looked out onto Narrow Street and sat on the window bench. Ferdy and Ginsbergbear pulled up
bentwood cane-bottomed chairs and McGoogs perched on a leatherette-padded stool. They huddled conspiratorially.
“My plan is that we explore the caves south
of Mam Tor and discover what is going on.” began Slasher McGoogs, producing a
dog-eared copy of The Potholer’s Handbook for Derbyshire, IIIrd Pocket Edition,
1956; printed on storm resistant paper. Within the chapter headed Castleton Caverns it
included a handy sketch map of the Speedwell and Peak cave system. It did not show Titan, which at
the time of printing was still to be discovered, but Slasher had roughly
pencilled in the location of the gigantic chamber.
“Have
you cleared any of this with Larry?” asked Boz.
“I
have told Larry nothing. I
despise despots and Larry is Gato NĂºmero Uno.”
“That’s
hardly fair,” chipped in Phoebles, “We and the Revolutionary Committee did all agree
he should be PM.”
“And
it’s not as if he’s done any harm since taking office. In fact he’s done sweet FA. I’m amazed he doesn’t get bored.”
Added Ginsbergbear.
“If
I may interject at this point.” interjected Ferdy, “Mr Larry can in no way have
‘done sweet Fanny Adams’ despite the accusations in Mr Fluffy’s Chicken News on
US telly. Firstly she was
not all that sweet – she was a grubby little tyke. Secondly, she was ‘done’ many decades ago and her
story has passed into myth.
And thirdl…”
The
tail end of a steel wire ladder dropped past their window into the street
outside. It was followed by
the descent of a pair of improbably long legs and finally by the top half,
only, of a bottle-green chauffer’s uniform. As the door to the catnip den opened and Barrymore,
Larry’s indispensable factotum, entered the inmates could hear the Vwwshsh of
the twin VW vectored screw engines of the incumbent Prime Minister’s personal
dirigible. She lifted her
goggles and perched them above the peak of her cap as the wire ladder began to
drift slowly down Narrow Street.
“Stay!”
commanded Barrymore into the discreet mouthpiece that curved elegantly out from
under her headgear. The
drifting ceased instantly.
“Blimey!”
exclaimed Boz, “Is the Den bugged?”
“Certainly
not, Mr Boris. I just
happened to be passing and am graced with unusually acute hearing. Larry wanted you to know that he
has despatched the Coleyfishspytrawler Lord Ancaster towards Antarctica to
investigate the rumours.”
“What
rumours?” asked a slightly ruffled Slasher.
“Ah,
Mr McGoogs, a pie without your sticky paw in it? Makes a refreshing change. There’s reports of unusual activity at the US airbase
– UFO under the ice – that sort of thing. Leave it with us. You have Larry’s full approval for your own little
enterprise.”
“Man…
Larry knows of our enterprise?” Ginsbergbear spoke, “I’m not sure even we know
about our enterprise yet.”
Sashaying
over to the door Barrymore looked back over a coquettishly inclined shoulder, pinned them with her golden, kohl lined eyes and said, “Carry on.”
Wrapping
one leg around the wire ladder with the sensuality of a trapeze artist, she
ascended into the heavens.