They found Jane sitting on her own in a large office, behind a desk you could have played football on, hunched over a thick pile of papers, a calculator and a six-handed clock. She looked up as they walked in and frowned.
âHello,' she said. âYou're late.'
Staff did a quick but violent double-take; Ganger merely smiled.
âI forgot,' he said. âWe should have known that you'd have seen today's rushes yesterday. Were we held up in traffic?'
Jane nodded. âIt's the one good thing about the old system,' she said. âYou can always take an advance look at what unforseen things are going to happen in the next few days. Gives you a chance to know what not to expect. Encourages sloppy planning, though.'
Ganger took his usual seat on the edge of the desk, noticing as he did so that the papers which covered the rest of it to a depth of six inches had been specially cleared away for him. Nice touch. âAny progress so far?' he asked.
Jane shrugged. âDepends,' she said. âThat's the tiresome thing about the whole set-up, really.' She sighed. âFor instance,' she went on, âI finally managed to persuade the personnel people to try out some new staff rosters. Nobody liked the sound of them at first, but we negotiated a bit, and finally everyone agreed to give them a month's trial, starting on the twentieth.'
Staff nodded. âWell done you,' he said. âSo where's the problem?'
âThe problem,' Jane replied wryly, âis that out there on the shop floor, it's been the nineteenth for the last three days. The same twenty-four hours, over and over again. I think it's called working to rule.'
Ganger clicked his tongue sympathetically. âNever mind,' he said, âit was a nice try. Come on, let's go and have some lunch. I thought we might try . . .'
âI know,' Jane interrupted. âI booked us a table.'
Â
âI recommend the veal,' Ganger said judicially, his finger traversing the menu. âThey do a very . . .'
âNo thanks,' Jane replied. âI didn't like it. There was too much tarragon, or something like that. I think I'll just have spaghetti.'
Staff looked up, with an artificially neutral expression on his face. âWhat did I have?' he said.
âScampi,' Jane replied, without looking up. âIt was cold, but you didn't want to make a fuss and send it back.'
âThanks,' Staff said quietly. âIn that case, I'll try the osso bucco.'
âIn fact.' Ganger leaned forward and pushed the menu aside from in front of Jane's face. âIn fact,' he said, âthere's not much point in us having this meeting, since you already know everything we said.'
Jane shrugged. âWell,' she replied, âI may, but you don't. I can tell you, though, it was a complete waste of . . . a complete wash-out,' she corrected herself. âWe didn't achieve anything.'
Ganger exchanged glances with Staff, and grinned. âI know,' he said. âSmart move, huh?'
Jane looked at him blankly. âI beg your pardon?' she said.
âThink.' Ganger leaned back and snapped a breadstick. âThis meeting's already taken place, right? Nothing can change that, sure, but that doesn't mean to say you've still got to go through with having the veal. You can have something nice instead. True?'
âWell . . .'
âLikewise,' he continued, after he'd cleared his throat of bread shrapnel, âwe don't
have
to reach the same depressing conclusions I gather we're going to reach in what I would call the Authorised Version. Do you follow me?'
Jane bit her lip thoughtfully. âWell,' she said, âI certainly don't remember you saying that. You mean . . .'
âExactly.' Ganger smiled. âThe first version is strictly
for the cameras.You realise that we were all under surveillance, of course.'
âWere we?' Jane asked. âOr rather, are we?'
âDefinitely.' Ganger unfolded his napkin and tucked a corner of it behind the knot of his tie. âBut the version the cameras will see is the Authorised Version. This one's one hundred per cent off the record.'
âIt'll never have taken place, you see,' Staff broke in. âSo we can say what we like without fear of being overheard. It was his idea,' he added generously. âThis fellow here's got a brain like a pinball machine, but it does come in handy when the going gets devious.'
âI see,' Jane said, and in doing so told the truth. In exactly the same way, she could see a whole page of Chinese without understanding a word of it. âSo, what do we talk about?'
Staff poured himself a glass of mineral water, examined it carefully to make sure it was still there, and drank it. âWe felt it was time we sort of took stock,' he said gravely. âSee where we've reached, and so forth.'
âIn other words,' Ganger went on, smoothly catching the narrative relay baton from his colleague, âit's work-in-progress time. Mid-term report, if you like. Okay?'
Jane nodded. âFine,' she said. âAnd before you start, if you want to call it a day, that's fine by me.'
The two senior officials looked at each other in surprise.
âWhatever makes you say that?' Staff demanded. âDon't tell me you don't find the work challenging enough.'
Jane laughed sourly. âOh, it's challenging all right,' she said. After a moment's pause, she folded her arms and set her face in a grim, nobody-leaves-until-the-culprit-owns-up expression. âI must say,' she said, âI do think you two might have warned me before I started.'
âDidn't we?' Ganger said innocently. âI thought we . . .'
âDid you hell as like,' Jane interrupted angrily. âYou
told me you wanted someone with a fresh perspective and no vested interests to sort out the way this Administration of yours works. That's fine. Maybe I might be able to help you with that, a little bit. What you didn't tell me was that you want me just as part of some horrible office-politics thing of your own. Well, I'm sorry, but no.'
Ganger, for once, looked confused. At least, he wasn't smiling, and without a smile to hold them together his features tended to sag like an unpropped clothes-line. âHold on,' he said. âThat's not . . .'
Jane ignored him. âLet me just give you an example,' she said. âTake this Time thing. You wanted me to sort it out. Everybody seems to acknowledge it needs sorting out. Fine. I thought about it, and I think I've come up with an answer that works.'
Staff's eyebrows shot up like the price of gold in an oil crisis. âYou have?' he said. âHow?'
Jane frowned. âIt's really very simple,' she said. âInstead of having it all just lying about and slopping around, all like-an-ever-rolling-stream-bears-all-its-sons-away sort of thing, you should put the whole thing on rails.Then everyone'd know exactly where it was meant to be going and we wouldn't have any more of those dreadful flashbacks.'
âWhat flashbacks?'
âThen everyone'd know exactly where it was meant to be going and we wouldn't have any more of those dreadful flashbacks.'
âWhat flashbacks?'
âThen everyone'd know exactly where it was meant to be going and we wouldn't have any more of those dreadful flashbacks.'
âWhat flashbacks? All right,' Staff admitted, âpoint taken. But just think of the . . .'
âAnd don't say it was because of the cost,' Jane interrupted. âAgain, it's as plain as the nose on your face that
you finance it by bringing in private capital. The share-holders put up the cost of building the track, and in return they get a slice of the tolls and fares in perpetuity.' She thought for a moment, and smiled. âAnd boy, do I mean perpetuity. But nobody's done it, have they? And nobody's going to do it either. I checked the files.'
âYou did what?'
âI checked the files.'
âYou did what?'
âHang on,' Jane said, and she banged the side of the table with the flat of her hand. âLoose connection somewhere, probably. Sorry, yes, I checked the files. It's a funny feeling, you know, reading about what you're going to do in a dusty old file you find at the back of a pile of old boxes in the cleaning cupboard. Anyway, there it all was, and guess what? The idea was completely ignored, and I left the Department after fourteen days with absolutely nothing to show for it. Now then.' She leaned her elbows on the table and gave Staff the sort of look that would have made a mammoth in an ice-floe in Siberia start wondering where the sudden nip in the air was coming from. âWhat's it all in aid of?' she asked. âI mean . . .'
Before anyone could speak, they became aware of someone standing over them, radiating disapproval. Staff was the first one to remember how his voice worked.
âRight,' he said. âTo start with, I think we're all having the melon . . .'
âYou maybe,' said the waitress, her notebook closing like a carnivorous plant. âHer, no. She's barred, OK?'
Ganger and Staff looked at each other. âI beg your pardon?'
The waitress tutted like a distant machine-gun. âYour lady friend,' she replied. âCalls herself a waitress. Insults my best customers, leaves without saying nothing, then thinks she can waltz in here ordering melon. No way.
Out. There's a Burger King two blocks down the street,' she added venomously. âSay Rosa sent you.'
Â
Idyllic. It was the only word to describe it.
In the far distance, a soft mist hung lightly over the blue hills. The long grass, still littered with pearly drops of dew, smelt fresh and clean. The slightest of breezes arched the long, stiff necks of the flowers that grew beside the gently murmuring stream. Here and there, a few sheep with pink bows tied round their necks lay under the shade of attractively gnarled oak trees, chewing slowly and counting humans. In the porch of the little loaf-shaped cottage, a young mother with a baby on her knee rocked slowly backwards and forwards crooning an ancient lullaby:
â
O abeth cynan sianon
Cor-ara llana reanon
Y-tal ny rhian myanon . . .'
1
Bjorn materialised, fell about five feet out of nothing-ness, landed heavily on all fours, recovered and looked about him. His senses took in all the available information and made a correct assessment.
âOh
shit
,' he said. âNot again.'
Â
âHave a nice day, now.'
âYes, thanks,' Staff replied absent-mindedly, and lifted the tray. He steered it back towards the corner table, hampered in doing so by the fact that he could only just see over the top of the chips.
âOh,' said Jane. âI thought I asked for the Double Chilli Nutburger with regular onions.'
âDid you?' Staff gave her a long look, combining threats with entreaties.
âHowever,' Jane added quickly, âthis looks simply delicious, whatever it . . .'
âRight,' Ganger interrupted. âHere we all are. To business. '
He twitched his handkerchief out of his top pocket and tucked it into his collar. The other two gave him hard, cold looks which he entirely failed to notice.
âAgenda time,' he went on. âIf we start off generally considering (a) our overall aim and objectives, (b) our achievements to date, (c) . . .'
âYour tie's just gone in the barbeque sauce,' said Jane.
â(c),' Ganger continued, moving his tie slightly, âobstacles to be overcome, (d) . . .'
Staff coughed meaningfully. âYes,' he said, âall right, we get the point. There's no need to be so damned ceremonious about it all.'
Ganger frowned at him; that is to say, he smiled at him with added eyebrows.
â(d) . . .' he said firmly.
Jane shook her head. âSorry to butt in,' she said, âbut can we start now? Only, I do have work I ought to be getting on with.' She stopped, and a sound like a laugh heard through a bacon-slicer came out of her mouth. âMind you,' she added, âfor the life of me I can't see the point. Can you?'
Ganger lowered his head and stirred his coffee with a pencil. Staff turned a chunk of crisp, golden something or other round in his fingers and stared into the salt-cellar.
âCan you?' Jane repeated.
There was a moment of complete silence, except for the sound of 163 people eating and talking loudly in the background. Ganger removed his pencil from the coffee, wiped it carefully on the paper napkin and put it back in his inside pocket.
âPerhaps,' he said slowly, âwe ought to explain.'
Jane blinked, said âOh,' and instinctively reached for a chip. Ganger's elbow was in the way. Ah, but Man's reach must exceed Man's grasp, or what's a Heaven for?
âGo on,' she said, her mouth full.
Staff put down his crisp, golden whatever, which was moulting a sticky red and yellow sauce down the back of his hand, making him look like a wounded Martian. Then he looked Jane in the eye.
âIt's like this,' he said. âWhat we told you about the Administration being right up a tree and needing an outside view and a new broom and that sort of thing is absolutely kosher and on the level. You know that, you've seen for yourself. But there's more to it than that.'
âYes?'
âAbsolutely.' Ganger, leaning forward to emphasise the importance of his words, froze; then he slowly lifted his arm, inspected his elbow and shuddered. âBut really, it's all part of the same thing. I mean yes, the Administration is in a real mess. But how do you think it got that way?'
Jane thought for a moment. âThings do,' she said.
âOf their own accord, you mean?' Staff said. âEntropy theory and its application to practical office management. It's true enough, as far as it goes . . .'