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Legends from the End of Time - Constant Fire

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Ñåðèÿ: Legends from the End of Time

 

 


      She was panting as she reached them. "It's only little me!"
      Abu Thaleb was avuncular. "Miss Ming, again we meet. Scheherazade come among us." The dusky commissar was one of the few regular visitors to Doctor Volospion's, perhaps the only friend of the Doctor's to treat her kindly. "You enjoy the entertainment, I hope?"
      "It's a great party if you like elephants," she said. But the joke had misfired; Abu Thaleb was frowning. So she added with some eagerness: "I personally love elephants."
      "I did not know we had that in common."
      "Oh, yes. When I was a little girl I used to go for rides at the zoo whenever I could. At least once a year, on my birthday. My daddy would try to take me, no matter what else was happening…"
      "I must join in the compliments." Doctor Volospion cast a glinting eye from her toes to her bow. "You outshine us all, Miss Ming. Such taste! Such elegance! We, in our poor garb, are mere flickering candles to your supernova!"
      Her giggle of response was hesitant, as if she suspected him of satire, but then an expression almost of tranquillity passed across her features. His flattery appeared to have a euphoric effect upon her. She became a fondled cat.
      "Oh, you always do it to me, Doctor Volospion. Here I am trying to be brittle and witty, cool and dignified, and you make me grin and blush like a schoolgirl."
      "Forgive me."
      She frowned, finger to lips. "I'm trying to think of a witticism to please you."
      "Your presence is uniquely pleasing, Miss Ming."
      Doctor Volospion moved his thin arms which were hardly able to bear the weight of the sleeves of his black and gold brocade gown.
      "But…"
      Doctor Volospion turned to Abu Thaleb. "You bring us a world of gentle monsters, exquisite commissar. Gross of frame, mild of manner, delicate of spirit, your paradoxical pachyderms!"
      "They are very practical beasts, Doctor Volospion." Abu Thaleb spoke defensively, as if he, too, suspected irony.
      People would often respond in this way to Doctor Volospion's remarks which were almost always, on the surface at least, bland enough.
      "Oh, indeed!" Doctor Volospion eyed a passing calf which had paused and was tentatively extending its trunk to accept a piece of fruit from the commissar's open palm. "Servants of man since the beginning of time."
      "Worshipped as gods in many eras and climes…" added Abu Thaleb.
      "Gods! True. Ganesh…"
      Abu Thaleb had lost his reservations:
      "I have re-created examples of every known species! The English, the Bulgarian, the Chinese, and of course the Indian…"
      "You have a favourite?" Volospion heaved at a sleeve and scratched an eyebrow.
      "My favourites are the Swiss Alpine elephants. There is one now. Notice its oddly shaped hooves. These were the famous white elephants of Sitting Bull, used in the liberation of Chicago in the 50th century."
      Miss Ming felt bound to interrupt. "Are you absolutely certain of that, commissar? The story sounds a bit familiar, but isn't quite right. I am an historian, after all, if not a very good one. You're not thinking of Carthage…?" She became confused, apparently afraid that she had offended him again. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have butted in. You know what a silly little ignoramus I am…"
      "I am absolutely certain, my dear," said Abu Thaleb kindly. "I had most of the information from an old tape which Jherek Carnelian found for me in one of the rotting cities. The translation might not have been perfect, but…"
      "Ah, so Carthage could have sounded like Chicago, particularly after it has been through a number of transcriptions. You see Sitting Bull could have been —"
      Doctor Volospion broke in on her speculations. "What romantic times those must have been! Your own stories, Miss Ming, are redolent with the atmosphere of our glorious and vanished past!" He looked at Abu Thaleb as he spoke. Abu Thaleb moved uncomfortably.
      Mavis Ming laughed. "Well, it wasn't all fun, you know." She sighed with pleasure, addressing Abu Thaleb. "The thing I like about Doctor Volospion is the way he always lets me talk. He's always interested…"
      Abu Thaleb avoided both their eyes.
      "Say what you like about him," she continued, "Doctor Volospion's a gentleman!" She became serious. "No, in a lot of ways the past was hell, though I must say there were satisfactions I never realized I'd miss till now. Sex, for instance."
      "You mean sexual pleasure?" The Commissar of Bengal drew a banana from his quilted cuff and began to peel it.
      Miss Ming appeared to be taken aback by this gesture. Her voice was distant. "I certainly do mean that."
      "Oh, surely…" murmured Doctor Volospion.
      Miss Ming found her old voice. "Nobody around here ever seems to be interested. I mean, really interested. If that's what's meant by an ancient race, give me what you call the Dawn Ages — my time — any day of the week! Well, not that you have days or weeks, but you know what I mean. Real sex!"
      She seemed to realize that she was in danger of becoming intense and she tried to lighten the effect of her speech by breaking into what, in the Dawn Age, might have been a musical laugh.
      When her laughter had died away, Doctor Volospion touched his right index finger to his left eyelid. "Can this be true, Miss Ming?"
      "Oh, you're a sweetie, Doctor Volospion. You make a girl feel really foolish sometimes. It's not your fault. You've got what we used to call an 'unfortunate tone' — it seems to make a mockery of everything. I know what it is. You don't have to tell me. You're really quite shy, like me. I've lived with you long enough to know…"
      "I am honoured, as always, by your interpretation of my character. But I am genuinely curious. I can think of so many who concern themselves with little else but sexual gratification. My Lady Charlotina, O'Kala Incarnadine, Gaf the Horse in Tears and, of course, Mistress Christia, the Everlasting Concubine." He cast an eye over the surrounding guests. "Jherek Carnelian crucifies himself in pursuit of his sexual object…"
      "It's not what I meant," she explained. "You see, they only play at it. They're not really motivated by it. It's hard to explain." She became coy. "Anyway, I don't think any of those are my types, actually."
      The Commissar of Bengal finished feeding his banana to a passing pachyderm. "I seem to recall that you were quite struck by My Lady Charlotina at one time, Miss Ming," he said.
      "Oh, that was —"
      Doctor Volospion studied something beyond her left shoulder. "And then there was that other lady. The time traveller, who I rather took to, myself. Why, we were almost rivals for a while. You were in love, you said, Miss Ming."
      "Oh, now you're being cruel! I'd rather you didn't mention…"
      "Of course." Now he looked beyond her right shoulder. "A tragedy."
      "It's not that I — I mean, I don't like to think. I was badly let down by Dafnish — and by Snuffles, in particular. How was I to know that … Well, if you hadn't consoled me then, I don't know what I'd have done. But I wish you wouldn't bring it up. Not here, at least. Oh, people can be so baffling sometimes. I'm not perfect, I know, but I do my best to be tactful, you know. To look on the bright side. To help others. Betty used to say that I ought to think more of my own interests. She said I wasn't selfish enough. Oh, dear — people must think me a terrible fool. When they think of me at all!" She sniffed. "I'm sorry…"
      She craned to look back, following Doctor Volospion's gaze.
      Li Pao was nearby, bowing briefly to Doctor Volospion, making as if to pass on, for he was apparently in some haste, but Doctor Volospion smilingly called him over.
      "I was complimenting our host on his collection," he explained to Li Pao.
      Abu Thaleb made a modest gesture.
      Miss Ming bit her lip.
      Li Pao cleared his throat.
      "Aren't they fine?" said Doctor Volospion.
      "It is pleasant to see the beasts working," Li Pao said pointedly, "if only for the delight of these drones."
      Doctor Volospion's smile broadened. "Ah, Li Pao, as usual you refuse amusement! Still, that's your recreation, I suppose, or you would not attend so many of our parties."
      Li Pao bridled. "I come, Doctor Volospion, on principle. Occasionally there is one who will listen to me for a few moments. My conscience drives me here. One day perhaps I will begin to convince you of the value of moral struggle."
      An affectionate trunk nuzzled his oriental ear. He moved his head.
      Doctor Volospion was placatory. "But I am convinced, Li Pao, my dear friend. Its value to the 27th century is immeasurable. But here we are at the End of Time and we have quite different needs. Our future is uncertain, to say the least. The cosmos contracts and perishes and soon we must perish with it. Will industry put a stop to the dissolution of the universe? I think not."
      Miss Ming patted at a blonde curl.
      "Then you fear the end?" Li Pao said with some satisfaction.
      Doctor Volospion affected a yawn. "Fear? What is that?"
      Li Pao's chuckle was grim. "Oh, it's rare enough here, but I think you reveal at least a touch of it, Doctor Volospion."
      "Fear!" Doctor Volospion's nostrils developed a contemptuous flare. "You suggest that I —? But this is such a baseless observation. An accusation, even!"
      "I do not accuse, Doctor Volospion. I do not denigrate. Fear, where real danger threatens, is surely a sane enough response? A healthy one? Is it insane to ignore the knife which strikes for the heart?"
      "Knife? Heart?" Abu Thaleb lured the persistent elephant towards him, holding a bunch of grapes. "Do forgive me, Li Pao…"
      Doctor Volospion said softly: "I think, Li Pao, that you will have to consider me insane."
      Li Pao would not relent. "No! You are afraid. Your denials display it, your posture pronounces it!"
      Doctor Volospion moved an overloaded shoulder. "Such instincts, you see, have atrophied at the End of Time. You credit your own feelings to me, I think."
      Li Pao's gaze was steady. "I am not deceived, Doctor Volospion. What are you? Time traveller or space traveller? You are no more born of this age than am I, or Miss Ming, here."
      "What —?" Doctor Volospion was alerted.
      "You say that you do not fear," continued the Chinese, "yet you hate well enough, that's plain. Your hatred of Lord Jagged, for instance, is patent. And you exhibit jealousies and vanities that are unknown, say, to the Duke of Queens. If these are innocent of true guile, you are not. It is why I know there is a point in my talking to you."
      "I will not be condescended to!" Doctor Volospion glared.
      "I repeat — I praise these emotions. In their place —"
      "Praise?" Doctor Volospion raised both his hands, palms outward, to bring a pause. His voice, almost a whisper, threatened. "Strange flattery, indeed! You go too far, Li Pao. The manners of your own time would never allow such insults."
      "I do think you've gone just a teeny bit too far, Li Pao." Mavis Ming was anxious to reduce the tension. "Why are you so bent on baiting Doctor Volospion? He's done nothing to you."
      "You refuse to admit it," Li Pao continued relentlessly, "but we face the death of everything. Thus I justify my directness."
      "Shall we die gracelessly, then? Pining for hope when there is none? Whining for salvation when we are beyond help? You are offensive at every level, Li Pao."
      Miss Ming was desperate to destroy this atmosphere. "Oh, look over there!" she cried. "Can it be Argonheart Po arrived at last, with the food?"
      "He is late," said Abu Thaleb, looking up from his elephant.
      Li Pao and Doctor Volospion both ignored her.
      "There is hope, if we work," said Li Pao.
      "What? This is unbelievable." Doctor Volospion sought an ally but found only the anxious eyes of Mavis Ming. He avoided them. "The end looms — the inevitable beckons. Death comes stalking over the horizon. Mortality returns to the Earth after an absence of millennia. And you speak of what? Of work? Work!" Doctor Volospion's laugh was harsh. "Work? For what? This age is called the End of Time for good reason, Li Pao! We have run our race. Soon we shall all be ash on the cosmic wind."
      "But if a few of us were to consider…"
      "Forgive me, Li Pao, but you bore me. I have had my fill of bores today."
      "You boys should really stop squabbling like this." Determinedly Mavis Ming adopted a matronly role. "Silly, gloomy talk. You're making me feel quite depressed. What possible good can it do for anyone? Let's have a bit more cheerfulness, eh? Did I ever tell you about the time I — well, I was about fourteen, and I'd done it for a dare — we got caught in the church by the Reverend Kovac — I'd told Sandy, that was my friend —"
      Doctor Volospion's temper was not improved. An expression of pure horror bloomed on Miss Ming's round face as she realized that she had made another misjudgement and caused her protector to turn on her.
      He was vicious. "The role of diplomat, Miss Ming, does not greatly suit you."
      "Oh!"
      Abu Thaleb became aware, at last, of the ambience. "Come now…"
      "You will be kind enough not to interfere, not to interject your absurd and pointless anecdotes into the conversation, Miss Ming!"
      "Doctor Volospion!" It was a shriek of betrayal. Miss Ming took a step backwards. She became afraid.
      "Oh, she meant no harm…" Li Pao was in no position to mediate.
      "How," enquired Doctor Volospion of the shaking creature, "would you suggest we settle our dispute, Miss Ming? With swords, like Lord Shark and the Duke of Queens? With pistols? Reverb-guns? Flame-lances?"
      Her throat quivered. "I didn't mean…"
      "Well? Hm?" His long chin pointed at her throat. "Speak up, my portly referee. Tell us!"
      She had become very pale and yet her cheeks flamed with humiliation and she did not dare look at any of them. "I was only trying to help. You were so angry, both of you, and there's no need to lose your tempers…"
      "Angry? You are witless, madam. Could you not see that we jested?"
      There was no evidence. Miss Ming became confused.
      Li Pao's lips were pursed, his cheeks were as pale as hers were red. Doctor Volospion's eyes were hard and fiery. Abu Thaleb gave vent to a troubled muttering.
      Miss Ming seemed fixed in her position by a terrible fascination. Mindlessly she stared at the eyes of her accuser. It seemed that her urge to flee was balanced by her compulsion to stay, to fan these flames, to produce the holocaust that would consume her, and her mouth opened and words fled out of it, high and frightened:
      "Not a very funny joke, I must say, calling someone fat and stupid. Make up your mind, Doctor Volospion. Only a minute or two ago you said how nice I looked. Don't pick on little Mavis just because you're losing your argument!" She panted. "Oh!"
      She cast about for friends, but all eyes were averted, save Volospion's, and those pierced.
      "Oh!"
      Doctor Volospion parted his teeth a fraction to hiss:
      "I should be more than grateful, Miss Ming, if you would be silent. For once in your life I suggest that you reflect on your own singular lack of sensitivity —"
      "Oh!"
      "— on your inability to interpret the slightest nuance of social intercourse save in your own unsavoury terms."
      "O-oh!"
      "A psychic cripple, Miss Ming, has no business swimming in the fast-running rivers of philosophical discussion."
      "Volospion!" Li Pao made a hesitant movement.
      Perhaps Miss Ming did not hear his words at all, perhaps she only experienced his tone, his vicious stance. "You are in a bad mood today…" she began, and then words gave way to her strangled, half-checked sobs.
      "Volospion! Volospion! You round on that wretch because you cannot answer me!"
      "Ha!" Doctor Volospion turned slowly, hampered by his robes.
      Abu Thaleb had been observing Miss Ming. He spoke conversationally, leaning forward to stare at her face, his huge, feathered turban nodding. "Are those tears, my dear?"
      She snorted.
      "I had heard of elephants weeping," said Abu Thaleb with some animation, "or was it giraffes? — but I never thought to have the chance to witness…"
      His tone produced a partial recovery in her. She lifted a wounded face. "Oh, be quiet! You and your stupid elephants."
      "So, all our time travellers are blessed with the same brand of good manners, it seems." Volospion had become cool. "I fear we have yet to grasp the essence of your social customs, madam."
      She trembled.
      "Childish irony…" said Li Pao.
      "Oh, stop it, Li Pao!" Mavis flinched away from him. "You started all this."
      "Well, perhaps…"
      Abu Thaleb put a puzzled tongue to his lower lip. "If…"
      "Oh," she sobbed, "I'm so sorry, commissar. I'm sorry, Doctor Volospion. I didn't mean to…"
      "It is we who are in the wrong," Li Pao told her. "I should have known better. You are a troubled young girl at heart…"
      Her weeping grew mightier.
      Doctor Volospion, Abu Thaleb and Li Pao now stood around her, looking down at her.
      "Come, come," said Abu Thaleb. He patted the crown of her head.
      "Oh, I'm sorry. I was only trying to help … Why does it always have to be me…?"
      Doctor Volospion at last placed a hand on her arm. "Perhaps I had best escort you home?" He was magnanimous. "You should rest."
      "Oh!" She moved to him, as if to be comforted, and then withdrew. "Oh, you're right! You're right! I'm fat. I'm stupid. I'm ugly." She pulled away from him.
      "No, no…" murmured Abu Thaleb. "I think that you are immensely attractive…"
      She raised a trembling chin. "It's all right." She swallowed. "I'm fine now."
      Abu Thaleb gave a sigh of relief. The other two, however, continued to watch her.
      She sniffed. "I just didn't want to see anyone having a bad time, hurting one another. Yes, you're right, Doctor Volospion. I shouldn't have come. I'll go home."
      Doctor Volospion replaced his hand to steady her. His voice was low and calming. "Good. I will take you in my air car."
      "No. You stay and enjoy yourself. It's my fault. I'm very sorry."
      "You are too distraught."
      "Perhaps I should take her," said Li Pao. "After all, she is right. I introduced the original argument."
      "We all relieve our boredom in one way or another," said Doctor Volospion quietly. "I should not have responded as I did."
      "Nonsense. You had every reason…"
      "Boo-hoo," said Miss Ming. She had broken down again.
      Abu Thaleb said coaxingly: "Would you like one of my little flying elephants, my dear, for your very own? You could take it with you."
      "Oh-ah-ha-ha…"
      "Poor thing," said Abu Thaleb. "I think she would have been better off in a menagerie, Doctor Volospion. Some of them feel much safer there, you know. Our world is too difficult for them to grasp. Now, if I were you…"
      Doctor Volospion tightened his grip.
      "Oh!"
      "You are too sensitive, Miss Ming," said Li Pao. "You must not take us seriously."
      Doctor Volospion laughed. "Is that so, Li Pao?"
      "I meant…"
      "Ah, look!" Doctor Volospion slowly raised a hand to point. "Here's your friend, Miss Ming."
      "Friend?" Red eyes were raised. Another sniff.
      "Your friend, the cook."
      It was Argonheart Po, in smock and cap of dark brown and scarlet, so corpulent as to make Miss Ming look slim. He advanced towards them with monumental dignity, pushing small elephants from his path. With a brief bow he acknowledged the company and then addressed Abu Thaleb.
      "I have come to apologize, epicurean commissar, for the lateness of my contribution."
      "No, no…" Abu Thaleb seemed weary of what appeared to be a welter of regrets.
      "There is an integral fault in my recipe," explained the Master Chef, "which I am loath to disguise by any artifice…"
      The Commissar of Bengal waved a white-gloved hand. "You are too modest, Kaiser of Kitchens. You are too much a perfectionist. I am certain that none of us would detect any discrepancy…"
      Argonheart Po acknowledged the compliment with a smile. "Possibly. But I would know." He confided to the others: "The cry of the artist, I fear, down the Ages. I hope, Abu Thaleb, that things will right themselves before long. If not, I shall bring you those confections which have been successful, but I will abandon the rest."
      "Drastic…" Abu Thaleb lowered his eyes and shook his head. "Can we not help in some way?"
      "The very reason I came. I hoped to gain an opinion. If there is someone who could find it within themselves to leave the party for a short while, to return with me and sample my creations, not so much for their flavour as for their consistency. It would not require much time, nor would it require a particularly sophisticated palate, but…"
      "Miss Ming!" said Doctor Volospion.
      "Me," she said.
      "Here is your chance to be of service."
      "Well," she began, "as everyone knows, I'm no gourmet. Not that I don't enjoy my chow, and of course Argonheart's is always excellent, but I'd like to help out, if I can." She was twice the woman.
      "It is not a gourmet's opinion I seek," Argonheart Po told her. "You will do excellently, Miss Ming, if you can spare a little time."
      "You would be delighted, wouldn't you, Miss Ming?" said Abu Thaleb sympathetically.
      "Delighted," she confirmed. She cast a wary glance at Doctor Volospion. "You wouldn't mind?"
      "Certainly not!" He was almost effusive.
      "A splendid idea," said Li Pao, blatantly relieved.
      "Well, then, I shall be your taster, Argonheart." She linked her arm in the cook's. "And I really am sorry for that silly fuss, everybody."
      They shook their heads. They waved their fingers.
      She smiled. "It did clear the air, anyway, didn't it? You're all friends again now."
      "Absolutely," said Li Pao.
      "Well, that's fine."
      "And you won't be wanting the little elephant?" Abu Thaleb asked. "I can always create another."
      "I'd love one, Abu. Another time, perhaps when I have a menagerie of my own. And power rings of my own and everything. I've nowhere to keep it while I stay with Doctor Volospion."
      "Ah, well." Abu Thaleb also seemed relieved.
      "I think," said Argonheart Po, "that we should go as quickly as possible."
      "Of course," she said, "You really must take me in hand, Argonheart, and tell me exactly what you expect me to do."
      "An opinion, I assure you, is all I seek."
      They made their adieux.
      "Well," she confided to Argonheart as they left, "I must say you turned up at just the right moment. Honestly, I've never seen such a display of temper! You're so calm, Argonheart. So unshakeably dignified, you know? I did my best, of course, to calm everyone down, but they were just determined to have a row! Of course, I do blame Li Pao. Doctor Volospion had a perfectly understandable point of view, but would Li Pao listen to him? Not a bit of it. I suspect that Li Pao never listens to anyone but himself. He can be so thoughtless sometimes, don't you find that?"
      The Master Chef smacked his lips.

4. In which Mavis Ming is once again disappointed in her Ambitions

      Argonheart Po dipped his fingers into his rainbow plesiosaurus (sixty distinct flavours of gelatine) and withdrew it as the beast turned its long neck round to investigate, mildly, the source of the irritation.
      The great cook put a hand to mouth, sucked, and sighed.
      "What a shame! Such an excellent taste."
      Argonheart Po's creature, lumbering on massive legs that were still somewhat wobbly, having failed to set at the same time as the rest of its bulk, moved to rejoin the herd grazing some distance away on the especially prepared trees of pastry and angelica that Argonheart Po had designed to occupy them until it was time to drive them to the party which was only a mile or two off (the gargantua were plainly visible on the horizon).
      "You agree, then, Miss Ming? The legs lack coherence." He licked a disappointed mouth.
      "Isn't there something you could add?" she suggested. "Those flippers were really meant for the sea, you know…"
      "Mm?"
      "It's not your fault, not strictly speaking. The design of the creature itself is wrong. You must be able to do something, Argonheart, dear."
      "Oh, indeed. A twist of a power ring and all would be well, but I should continue to be haunted by the mystery. Was the temperature too high, for instance? You see, I allow for all the possibilities. My researches show that the animal could move on land. I wonder if the weight of the beast alters the atomic structure of the gelatine. If so, I should have prepared for it in my original recipe. There is no time to begin again."
      "But Argonheart…"
      He shook his huge head. "I must cull the herd of the failures and present, I am afraid, only a partial spectacle."
      "Abu Thaleb will still be pleased, I'm sure."
      "I hope so." He voiced a stupendous and sultry sigh.
      "It is nice to be out of the hurly-burly for a bit," she told him, her mind moving on to other topics.
      "If you would care to rejoin the party now?"
      "No. I want to be here with you. That is, if you have no objection to little Mavis watching a real artist at work."
      "Of course."
      She smiled at him. "It's such a relief, you see, to be out here alone with a real man. With someone who does something." She simpered. "What I mean is, Argonheart, is that I've always wanted…"
      She gasped as he jumped, his hands flailing, to taste a passing pterodactyl. He missed it by several inches, staggered and fell to one knee.
      "Cunning beasts, those." He picked himself up. "My fault. I should have made them easier to catch. Too much sherry and not enough blancmange."
      She sidled up to him again. "My husband, Donny Stevens, was a real man, for all his faults."
      Argonheart returned suddenly to his knees. He cupped his hands around something which wobbled, glinting green and yellow in the pale sunshine. "Oh, this makes up for everything. See what it is, Miss Ming?"
      "A dollop of jello?"
      "Dollop? Dollop!" He breathed upon it. He fondled the rounded, quivering surface. He spoke reverently. "This is an egg, Miss Ming. One of my creations has actually laid an egg. Good heavens! I could breed them. What an achievement!" His expression became seraphic.
      "A man like you is capable of anything, Argonheart. I often felt Donny was like that. I never thought I'd miss the bastard."
      He was searching the ground for more eggs.
      "You remind me of him a little," she said softly. "You are real, Argonheart."
      Argonheart Po's only weakness was for metaphysical speculation. Miss Ming had captured his attention. Stroking his egg, he looked round. "Mm?"
      Her breast rose and fell rapidly. "A real man."
      He was curious. "You believe everyone else imaginary, then? But why should I be real when the others are not? Why should you be real? Reality, after all, can be the syllabub that melts upon the tongue, leaving not even a flavour of memory…"
      Her breathing became calmer. She turned to contemplate the half-melted remains of a completely unsuccessful stegosaurus.
      "I meant," she said, "that Donny was a manly man. Stupid and vain, of course. But that's probably all part of it. And obsessed with his work — well, when he wasn't screwing his assistants." She laid her hand upon his trembling egg. "I like you, Argonheart. Have you ever thought…?"
      But the chef's attention was wavering again as he bent to scoop up a little iguanadon. He placed his egg carefully upon a slab of marzipan rock and held the iguanadon out to her for her inspection.
      With a frustrated sigh she licked the beast's slippery neck. "Too much lime for my taste." She gave a theatrical shudder and laughed. "Far too bitter for me, Argonheart, dear."
      "But the texture? It was the texture, alone, I needed to know about."
      The iguanadon struggled, squawking rather like a chicken, and was released. It ran, glistening, semi-transparent, green and orange, in a crazy path towards the nearby cola lake.
      "Perfect," she said. "Firm and juicy."
      He nodded sadly. "The small ones are by far the most successful. But that will scarcely satisfy Abu Thaleb. I meant the monsters for him. The little beasts were only to set off the large ones — to set the scale, do you see. I was too ambitious, Miss Ming. I tried to produce too much and too many." His fat brow wrinkled.
      "You haven't been listening, Argonheart, dear," she chided. "Argonheart?"
      Reluctantly he withdrew from his regrets. "We were discussing the nature of reality."
      "No."
      "You were discussing what? Men?"
      She patted at the yellow flounces of her frock. "Or their absence?" She chuckled. "I could do with one…"
      He had picked up a ladle in his plump, gloved hand. She followed him as he approached his lake, bent on a final taste.
      "A man? What could you do with one?" He sipped.
      "I need one."
      "A special kind?"
      "A real one."
      "Couldn't you make something — someone, I mean — to suit you? Doctor Volospion would help." He looked across the tranquil surface, like molten amber. "Delicious!"
      She seemed pained. "There's no need, dear, to throw that particular episode in my face."
      "Um. Yet, I'm indulging myself, I fear." He stooped, dipped his ladle, drew it to his red lips, sampled self-critically and nodded his head. "Yes. The conception was too grandiose. Given another day I could put everything to rights, but poor Abu Thaleb expects … Ah, well!"

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