That crazy-looking cat-dog was sitting in Peter's lap with his deformed limbs sticking out in a tangle. Karl seemed to be looking at me disappointedly, too. I didn't know what they wanted from me. Did they want me to stay here with them?
Soon we were out of the bar and moving through the dim streets. I was feeling woozy from the drink I had ended up finishing. There were more people about, coming and going like it was rush-hour, many of them got up in their finery.
Soon we reached the doorway, the curtain of ivy and, beyond that, the untended park. We emerged from beneath the bandstand to find that night had fallen and there was a layer of crisp, blood-coloured snow over everything. It looked surprisingly gruesome out there.
I patted Karl and Peter didn't make a fuss insisting on coming any further with me. I was grateful. I just needed to do some walking by myself.
Pretty soon I was lost.
I found grand arcades and fancy streets crammed with shops. It was all emporiums here, in this part of town, beyond the wild park. The windows were lit up, filled with gorgeously colourful displays. Hordes of shoppers flitted to and fro with parcels. Lizards clopped by in the roads, the wheels of the carriages turning the snow to bloody slush. For the first time it hit me that we had both Martian Thanksgiving and Christmas coming up. Except the people here didn't have Martian Thanksgiving, did they? What they had, it seemed, was a full-on Dickensian Christmas. Ding-donging merrily on high and with more trimmings than I'd seen in my life. Something gripped me deep inside my stomach. That pit-of-your belly Christmas feeling that I hadn't had in years.
I remembered how we used to think that Adams' Exotic Emporium was the last word in festive displays. Their windows and well-stocked shelves were the highlight of our town's Christmas. Why, that whole shop would have been lost and insignificant in the City Inside. Everything in it would have looked tawdry and poor by comparison.
I succumbed to a moment of tearfulness. Just the thought of being back in Our Town made me catch my breath. I thought about Da steering our hovercart into town with Al and me, our pocket money clenched in our gloves, ready to pick out gifts.
Why was I thinking about that now? Standing in the cloying, noisy heat of the entrance to a fancy store, deep in the heart of the City Inside, I was brimming with tears. My clothes were shabby and plain and wet through. Some of the fancy-assed people going by on either side of me were giving me nasty looks.
I checked my purse to see what money I had. It would be great to surprise Al with a small gift. Cheer him up for losing his job. I looked at all the colourful silk shirts that were on display in great, billowing profusion. I could picture him in something with flowing sleeves and ruffles, like a buccaneer or a pirate. But all I had in my purse and my basket was a handful of coins.
35
I returned home with my shopping basket stuffed with several silk scarves, an expensive shirt and more bottles of cologne than Al could ever use. I had walked the cold streets of the City Inside carrying hot merchandise, and it felt good.
Al was asleep on the sofa. Toaster was bustling about, complaining that dinner was dried up and ruined.
âWhere have you been?' my brother scolded me.
âIt's so Christmassy out there,' I said. âThe stores are incredible. We need to go and see them together, Al.' In the meantime I had brought Christmas to our apartment. I produced the silk shirt and the scarves and laid out the bottles of cologne on the table. He was delighted, despite himself.
I asked whether he had heard from his young lady.
âOh, Lora. She's so mad at me. She can't believe that I got myself into trouble at work. She's actually shocked. She's never been in any kind of bother in her life.'
I nodded sadly. âMaybe that's why she's so dull.'
âLora!' He clapped a hand over his mouth, starting to laugh.
âWell, it's true. She's a lovely looking girl and all, but she's a bit prim and boring, isn't she?'
Al sighed, fiddling with his new shirt. âMaybe.' He was wistful about losing his job with the newspaper. He had loved working there and being treated like a grown-up.
âDon't you wish we were still refugees?' I asked him impulsively. From the kitchen there came the clanging of Toaster trying to rescue our dinner from the oven. âJust imagine. When there were no rules at all. When all we had to do was make sure we survived.'
Al surprised me by looking scared. âPromise me we won't ever have to go back to that. We can stay here in the City, can't we? We won't ever have to leave?'
âSure, yes, of course,' I said. âOur lives are here now. But was it so bad when we were in the wilderness? I looked after you and kept you safe, didn't I?'
He nodded. âOf course you looked after us. You saved us. Tillian says it was a miracle we came through all that.'
âDoes she now?'
Toaster appeared with a stiff expression. Tillian's father, Mr Tollund Graveley, was on the telephone, he announced, and he was terribly eager to have a word with Al. My brother brightened up straight away. Toaster brought out some plates of horrible, blackened food, like he was making a point.
Al returned after only a few minutes, looking pleased with himself. Mr Graveley had apparently forgiven my brother personally for his indiscretion with the Archive Machine. Furthermore, Tillian's father had renewed the invitation to Al to visit their family home in Darwin Sector the following evening. Martian Thanksgiving, as it would have been, back in our old life. He told Al, as if in passing, that I was invited, too. The Graveley family was eager to make my acquaintance. Having read a couple of newspaper articles about me, they were intrigued to meet the girl who had led her family and friends through the wilderness.
As Al told me this I groaned aloud. I wanted nothing less than to spend an evening being quizzed by people about our adventures.
I saw that Al was looking perturbed again.
âAre you dreading it as well?' I asked.
âIt isn't just that,' he frowned. âMr Graveley passed me onto Tillian for a quick word. She was whispering down the receiver so her father wouldn't hear. She says she has a package for me. Something she must smuggle out of work tomorrow. She said that she's going to do it for my sake, at great personal risk to herself.'
I was surprised to hear it. âWhat's in this package?'
Al said, âIt's got something to do with Grandma.'
I spluttered out the water Toaster had brought with my singed dinner.
âIt seems that after I typed in my search request and then got found out and sacked, the Archive Machine carried on doing what I'd asked it. It continued to go through all the records of women called Margaret Estelle Robinson. And it printed more stuff out.'
âWhat stuff?'
âTillian found the evidence today. Piled up in a tray no one had noticed.'
We set off late in the following afternoon. Of course Tillian had given us very precise instructions for getting to her parents' apartment in the Darwin District. Now we had to cross the City and meet these strange, grand folks. But we were the kids who had crossed half of Mars together! The evening shouldn't have held any worries for us.
I was pleased to see that Al was wearing the cream silk shirt I'd pilfered for him. One of the scarves, too, which was vivid orange against the deep crimson of his new woollen coat. He'd always loved bright, clashing earth tones like that. He had always been more interested in dressing up than I had. I was wearing more sombre and respectable clothing. I'd bought myself a frock with only minimal constrictions and ruffling, but at least I was branching out into that Victorian style of theirs. Now I knew why they favoured it. They were actual Victorian people, living in space, according to Peter. I hadn't told Toaster or Al any of that yet. It still seemed so unreal.
For the hundredth time Toaster asked whether we wanted him to accompany us. I told him we'd be fine, imagining their reactions if we turned up with our sentient sunbed for a chaperone. Toaster didn't appear to mind the snub. He admitted that his thoughts were elsewhere. He was busy imagining what information about Grandma the computer at
The City Insider
had apparently found.
âIt is her life story, I am sure of it,' he was burbling as we prepared to leave. âI can't wait to find out. Why, she was a Historical Personage, and even people from the City Inside must know of her. That seems likely now. We are going to be able to read about her true story! Her past will be returned to us! And with it, mine too! Everything I have ever forgotten!'
We left him in the dizzying throes of his new obsession.
I didn't buy it, though. If, as Peter had told me, the people here were descended from humans who had left Earth just prior to the twentieth century, and if there had been no traffic or communication between them and our own folk, then there was no way they could have any knowledge of our Grandma whatsoever.
All the while I was wondering ⦠well, what if the City Insiders
did
know about us all along? They had telescopes and stuff, didn't they? They must have watched the skies and seen us landing. How come they never came offering their help? They had so much here, so many resources. It would have been so easy for them to help us out.
And, come to that, when Grandma and her people crash-landed in the
Melville
, the
Hawthorne
and the
Dickinson
, how come they never saw this place on the horizon? How come they missed seeing a whacking great big Emerald City like this?
Our ears were popping in the elevator and I found myself once again enjoying the sensation of falling through all those many storeys.
âAl, do you still have those pictures on your phone?' I asked. âThe ones you snapped of the globe in the lizard queen's throne room?'
He frowned at me, his thoughts a million miles away. âWhat? I suppose I do. Toaster fixed the charge for me once before. Maybe he could get it going again.'
âCould we take a look at them?'
âI guess so. How come?'
âI was thinking about our lost relations and friends. They're somewhere out thereâ¦'
âOh, Lora,' he sighed. âWe have got to start thinking about the future, you know.'
This sounded unnecessarily heartless to me.
We emerged from the elevator into the Downstairs Market, where there were paper garlands and swags of tinsel and candles burning everywhere. A group of men were hauling a colossal fir tree into place. Me and Al paused to marvel at the livid green foliage.
Passing through the market, I was listening for the sound of Peter's harp. I would love to introduce Al to him, and to show him Karl. But my new friend wasn't there. His spot was taken by a mime artist that we hurried past.
Al and I rode the omnibus from the corner of our long street. It, like the Pipeline train we caught next, was packed with commuters. Even at the close of a busy day, the people looked immaculate to me, in their high buttoned-up collars and waistcoats, the women in long dresses that dragged in the melting red snow.
Al led us to the platform where we were to catch the final train into Darwin District. He was completely in charge of us now.
36
The Graveleys owned an entire storey of their tower block, and there was no noisy Downstairs Market in their foyer. Just a fancy little shop for last-minute gifts and tasteful music and tasteful just about everything, as a matter of fact. I hated it straight away.
âThey can trace their family back to the first generation in this sector of Mars,' Al told me. âThat's why they're so rich and respectable. That's what Tillian told me.'
Their apartment on the 86th storey was furnished beautifully, with genuinely ancient fixtures and fittings. Everything smelled wonderfully of beeswax polish. Wooden furniture gleamed in the lamplight and the carpets felt about a foot thick.
An extremely delicate Servo-Furnishing guided us to a worn couch and offered us the teeniest glasses of sherry. He was a grandfather clock and it was easy to believe that his steady ticking had been going on for centuries.
âVery plush,' I hissed at my brother. I sipped my drink and almost gagged. It was way too sweet and thick as molasses. âWhoah. You've brought us into Dickens or Jane Austen.'
Al frowned at me. He was never big on reading so he didn't really know what I was talking about.
There was a delicate âharrumph' and we looked round to see Tillian entering the room with her parents. The old man was wearing some kind of army uniform with epaulettes and medals and even a ceremonial sword strapped to his belt. More dressy up, Aunt Ruby would have complained. Tillian herself was in quite a plain, straightforward gown of a pale blue fabric, which was very becoming. The mother came behind them, weighed down in layers of lacy fabric, yellowing with incredible age.
âTillian informs us that you made a most remarkable journey, Miss Robinson,' said her father. His voice was kind of muffled by his elaborate moustache and sidewhiskers.