Read Grailblazers Online

Authors: Tom Holt

Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire

Grailblazers (36 page)

BOOK: Grailblazers
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‘Pasta jar?'
‘That's not bigger than a football, idiot.'
‘Some of them are,' Turquine replied. ‘I went into this shop once...'
‘It's not a pasta jar,' Boamund said quietly. ‘Nine.'
‘Kitchen scales,' Pertelope suggested. ‘No, that's mechanical, I take that back. I know, it's a large tupperware cake box.'
‘No. Ten.'
‘Mixing bowl?'
‘No. Eleven.'
‘God, we're so
close,'
Lamorak said. ‘Let's see, it's a large plastic kitchen utensil, not mechanical. Plate rack?'
‘No. Twelve.'
‘Tricky one,' said Galahaut. ‘Can't be a flour jar, 'cos that'd be pottery, not plastic. Lammo, what do we keep in the cupboard under the sink, just behind the blender?'
There was a tense silence. Bedevere looked up, and saw that it had stopped raining.
‘How about a sink tidy?' Pertelope suggested. ‘We haven't had that yet, have we?'
‘It's not a sink tidy, and that's thirteen,' Boamund said. ‘What's a sink tidy, anyway?'
‘How about a bucket?' suggested Galahaut. ‘You know, for doing the floor with?'
‘Fourteen.'
‘Let's recap,' Turquine suggested, and while they were doing it, Boamund stared (so to speak) at the sharp, clear picture in his mind. It couldn't be ...
‘Dustpan and brush,' said Galahaut, the spokesman. ‘I mean, you could keep it in the kitchen if you didn't have a cupboard under the stairs.'
‘Fifteen,' replied Boamund, absently. The image in his mind refused to fade; if anything, it grew brighter.
‘I'm trying to think,' Turquine was saying, ‘what they've got in the kitchen at Pizza To Go.' He shook his head. ‘But it's not mechanical. I dunno, it's a good one, this.'
‘Lampshade,' Lamorak broke in, and there was a hint of desperation in his voice. But Boamund simply shook his head and said, ‘Sixteen.'
‘I know,' Pertelope said. ‘Silly of me not to have guessed. It's a plastic colander.'
‘Seventeen.'
‘Salad shaker.'
‘Eighteen.'
‘In the
kitchen,
for God's sake.'
‘Cutlery drawer.'
Boamund shook his head again. ‘Nineteen,' he murmured.
The knights looked at each other; and then Bedevere, who had been looking up at the sky and noticing that the clouds were breaking up and the stars were coming out, cleared his throat.
‘I think,' he said, ‘it's the Holy Grail.'
‘That's right,' Boamund said. ‘Twenty.'
9
Before anyone had a chance to speak, there was a soft cough behind them, and a man stepped forward.
‘Good evening, gentlemen,' he said.
A thousand-year-old instinct brought the knights smartly to their feet.
‘Good evening, Mr Magus, sir,' they chorused.
Simon Magus looked down at his clothes and sighed. He had done his best to disguise himself as an aged woodcutter, but fancy dress had never been his cup of tea.
‘Ready?'
The knights looked at each other. ‘Yes, sir,' said Boamund. ‘All ready.'
‘Splendid,' Simon Magus replied. ‘In that case, Boamund, if you'd care to follow me? The rest of you, stay here till I call.'
There was a faint rumble of murmuring from the knights - something mutinous about it not being fair, and a certain person being the teacher's pet. When Simon Magus turned round and looked at them, it died away completely.
‘Be good,' Simon Magus said. Then he walked away.
 
 
‘You'll need this.'
Boamund had been wondering what was in the canvas bag. It could have been fishing rods, or drain rods even, or a small collapsible easel, or possibly a photographer's tripod. But it wasn't.
‘Mind out,' the magician warned, ‘it's sharp.'
Boamund, who had already discovered this, sucked his finger. Very sharp and remarkably light, and it seemed to shine of its own accord in the pale moonlight.
‘Excalibur,' said Simon Magus casually. ‘Been up on the top of my wardrobe for years now, so I said to myself, I'm never going to get any use out of it, might as well pass it on to somebody who will.' He looked at it wistfully.
Excalibur! Someone or something with just a little more imagination than Boamund - a rock, say, or the root of a tree - might have imagined that the dim flame of light dancing on the blade of the sword flickered at the sound of the name. Boamund bit his lip.
‘Um,' he said, ‘are you sure, sir? I mean, I always thought that the King sort of chucked it in the lake.'
Simon Magus grinned. ‘He did,' he replied. ‘That's how I got it. Look.'
He pointed to a small group of letters engraved in gold on the ricasso of the sword; and as he did, one could have been forgiven for thinking that they glowed brightly for a fraction of a second.
SHEFFIELD, they said.
‘Anyway,' Simon Magus went on, rather self-consciously, ‘put it away for now and let's hope we won't need it. Should all be perfectly straightforward ...'
‘Halt!'
Out of the darkness, a figure loomed. Moonlight glinted on blued steel.
‘All right,' said Simon Magus patiently, after a relatively long pause. ‘We've halted. What can we do for you?'
‘Um.' The silhouette turned its head and whispered something urgently into the bush from which it had emerged. A couple of other silhouettes emerged rather reluctantly and stood behind it. ‘You may not pass,' it said.
‘Why not?'
‘You can't. Go away.'
Simon Magus and Boamund exchanged glances.
‘Can I?' said Boamund hopefully.
‘Go on, then,' Simon Magus replied. ‘But don't get carried away.'
With a whoop of delight, Boamund drew the sword from the canvas bag, swung it round his head so fast that Simon Magus nearly lost an ear, and lunged into the darkness. There were a few loud but very musical clangs, and Boamund came back.
‘They ran away,' he said. It was almost a whimper.
‘Never mind,' the magician replied. ‘There'll be others, I expect.'
Boamund nodded stoically and sheathed the sword.
‘Perhaps,' he said eagerly, ‘they'll ambush us.'
Simon Magus shrugged. ‘Actually,' he said, ‘I rather think that was meant to be an ambush just then. I don't think they've had an awful lot of practice at this sort of thing.'
‘Oh.' Boamund sounded surprised. ‘You know who they are, then?'
‘I've got a pretty good idea,' Simon Magus replied. ‘I think they're independent financial advisers. That or portfolio managers. Come on.'
They walked on round the edge of the lake. In a tree above their heads, an owl hooted. Boamund got something in his eye and paused to get it out again.
‘Excuse me asking,' he said tentatively, ‘but was it you who was that hermit I saw when I woke up, the one who said I should go and do this quest?'
Simon Magus nodded. ‘That's right,' he said.
‘Oh. I didn't recognise you.'
‘I was in disguise. It wouldn't have done for you to know, you see. Actually, it was a pretty terrible disguise. I'm surprised you didn't see through it.'
Boamund considered this revelation for a moment. ‘So you've been behind the whole thing, then? Me going to sleep and all that.'
‘That's right.' He hesitated, and then added, ‘You didn't mind, did you? I mean, you weren't about to do something else, or anything like that?'
‘No, not at all,' Boamund replied.
‘Good. I was a bit worried, you know, that I'd messed you about rather.'
A shadowy figure with a knife in its mouth dropped from a tree. Unfortunately, it had mistimed its descent. There was a thump; and when the shadowy figure came round, there were two men standing over it solicitously.
‘Are you all right?' asked Simon Magus.
‘I'th cut my mouf on this thucking dagger,' the assailant replied. ‘Thod it.'
‘You should be more careful, then, shouldn't you?' Simon Magus replied. ‘Here.' He gave the assailant a handkerchief.
‘Thankth.' He wiped his face, spat out a tooth and crawled away into the bushes.
Simon Magus shrugged. ‘Something tells me we're up against the B-team tonight,' he said. ‘Never mind. Bit of an anticlimax, though.'
They walked on in silence for a while, and then Boamund asked:
‘I know about the personal organiser, but what about the socks and the apron? I mean, are they for anything, or ...?'
Simon Magus made a clicking noise with his tongue. ‘Me and my memory,' he said. ‘Good job you reminded me. Have you got them with you?'
‘They're in my satchel.'
‘Good lad. Now,' said Simon Magus, lowering his voice, ‘let's just duck under this tree where it's nice and—'
‘Ouch,' said a masked assassin tetchily.
‘Sorry.'
‘Why the hell don't you look where you're going?'
‘Sorry,' Boamund replied, ‘it's dark. Have at you?' he suggested hopefully.
The masked assassin scowled at him. ‘Not bloody likely,' he said, getting to his feet and hopping a few paces. ‘You've done enough damage as it is.'
Mutteringto himself, he limped away into the gloom.
‘Right,' said Simon Magus. ‘Put on the socks and the apron, there's a good lad.'
Boamund frowned. ‘Have I got to?' he said.
Simon Magus looked at him. ‘Of course you've got to,' he said.
‘Oh,' Boamund replied. ‘Only I'll feel such a twit wandering about the place in a pinny with flowers on it.'
‘You can put it on under your coat if you like,' said the magician tolerantly. ‘Just hurry up, that's all.'
Boamund knelt down and unlaced his shoes. ‘They're important, are they?' he asked.
‘Vital, absolutely vital. Get a move on, will you? We haven't got all night.'
‘They're tickling my feet.'
‘Look...'
There was a bloodcurdling cry just behind him, and Simon Magus spun round.
‘Sorry,' he said, ‘but can you just hang on a tick? We aren't quite ready yet.'
The hooded thug froze in mid-swing. ‘What?' he said.
‘Won't keep you a moment,' Simon Magus replied. ‘The lad's just changing his socks.'
‘His
socks?
Now just a minute...'
‘It's all right, I'm ready now,' Boamund said, and there was a sudden flash of blue light as Excalibur swished out of the canvas bag. ‘Lay on!' he cried happily, and he darted forward. There was a metallic note, approximately D sharp, followed by the sound of someone in armour tripping over his feet and falling into a bush.
‘That's not fair,' said a voice from the undergrowth. ‘I wasn't ready.'
‘Tough,' said Simon Magus. ‘We ambushed you.'
‘No, you've got it all wrong,
I
ambushed
you
.'
Simon Magus grinned. ‘Didn't make a very good job of it, then, did you? Come on, Boamund, we'd better not be late.'
They walked on a few paces. ‘That wasn't very fair, was it?' Boamund said. ‘I mean, if he waited for us, then surely...'
‘Nonsense,' replied the magician firmly. ‘An ambush is an ambush. If he doesn't know that, then he's not fit to be out on his own.'
‘I
didn't know that—'
‘Ah,' replied Simon Magus, ‘but you're not on your own, are you?'
‘Oh, I see.'
They had come to a sort of jetty or landing-stage, and Simon Magus stopped and looked about him.
‘I think we're here,' he said. ‘Well, best of luck and all that. Don't forget what I told you.'
Boamund's face fell. ‘You're not leaving me, are you?' he said. ‘Only I thought ...'
“Fraid so,' the magician replied. ‘Any further intervention on my part would be most irregular, and I don't want the whole quest set aside on a technicality'
‘Oh,' Boamund said. A light breeze began to blow, rippling the surface of the lake. ‘What do I do now, then?'
‘You'll find out,' said the magician through a curtain of blue fire. ‘Cheerio.'
‘Cheerio, then,' Boamund replied. He turned and looked at the lake. ‘Oh, sir.'
‘Yes?'
‘What was it you told me that I'm supposed to remember?'
BOOK: Grailblazers
11.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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