I shook the jamjar and the rice and lentils settled together in that sort of random clumping way that chance usually dictates.
'So?' I asked.
'Entirely usual,' replied Mycroft. 'Standard clumping, entropy levels normal. Shake it every now and then. You'll know when a decrease in entropy occurs as the rice and lentils will separate into more ordered patterns – and that's the time to watch out for ludicrously unlikely coincidences.'
Polly entered the workshop and gave her husband a hug.
'Hello, you two,' she said. 'Having fun?'
'I'm showing Thursday what I've been up to, my dear,' replied Mycroft graciously.
'Did you show her your memory erasure device, Crofty?'
'No, he didn't,' I said.
'Yes I did,' replied Mycroft with a smile, adding: 'You're going to have to leave me, pet – I've work to do. I retire in fifty-six minutes precisely.'
My father didn't turn up that evening, much to my mother's disappointment. At five minutes to ten Mycroft, true to his word, and with Polly behind him, emerged from his laboratory to join us for dinner. Next family dinners are always noisy affairs and tonight was no different. Landen sat next to Orville and did a very good impression of someone who was trying not to be bored. Joffy, who was next to Wilbur, thought his new job was utter crap and Wilbur, who had been needled by Joffy for at least three decades, replied that he thought the Global Standard Deity faith was the biggest load of phoney codswallop he had ever come across.
'Ah,' replied Joffy loftily, 'wait until you meet the Brotherhood of Unconstrained Verbosity.'
Gloria and Charlotte always sat next to one another, Gloria to talk about something trivial and Charlotte to agree with her. Mum and Polly talked about the Women's Federation and I sat next to Mycroft.
'What will you do in your retirement, Uncle?'
'I don't know, pet. I have some books I've been wanting to write for some time.'
'About your work?'
'Much too dull. Can I try an idea out on you?'
'Sure.'
He smiled, looked around, lowered his voice and leaned closer.
'Okay, here it is: brilliant young surgeon Dexter Colt starts work at the highly efficient yet underfunded children's hospital doing pioneering work on relieving the suffering of orphaned amputees.
The chief nurse is the headstrong yet beautiful Tiffany Lampe. Tiffany has only recently recovered from her shattered love affair with anaesthetist Dr Burns and—'
'—they fall in love?' I ventured.
Mycroft's face fell.
'You've heard it, then?'
'The bit about the orphaned amputees is good,' I added, trying not to dishearten him. 'What are you going to call it?'
'I thought of Love among the Orphans. What do you think?'
By the end of the meal Mycroft had outlined several of his books to me, each one with a plot more lurid than the last. At the same time Joffy and Wilbur had come to blows in the garden, discussing the sanctity of peace and forgiveness amid the thud of fists and the crunch of broken noses.
At midnight Mycroft took Polly in his arms and thanked us all for coming.
'I have spent my entire life in pursuit of scientific truth and enlightenment,' he announced grandly, 'answers to conundrums and unifying theories of everything. Perhaps I should have spent the time going out more. In fifty-four years neither Polly nor myself has ever taken a holiday, so that is where we're off to now.'
We walked into the garden, the family wishing Mycroft and Polly well on their travels. Outside the door of the workshop they stopped and looked at one another, then at all of us.
'Well, thanks for the party,' said Mycroft. 'Pear soup followed by pear stew with pear sauce and finishing with bombs surprise – which was pear – was quite a treat. Unusual, but quite a treat. Look after MycroTech while I'm away, Wilbur, and thanks for all the meals, Wednesday. Right, that's it,' concluded Mycroft. 'We're off Toodle-oo.'