'Well,' I said, 'ever thought it odd that Parliament just roll over and do anything that Kaine asks?'
'I've given up even trying to understand Parliament,' said Bowden.
'They're all snivelling toadies,' put in Millon.
'If you even need a government,' added Stig, 'you are a life form flawed beyond redemption.'
'I was confused, too,' I continued. 'A government wholly agreeable to the worst excesses of Kaine could mean only one thing: some form of short-range mind control wielded by unscrupulous power brokers."
'Now that's my kind of theory!' exclaimed Millon excitedly.
'I couldn't figure it out at first, but then when I was up at Goliathopolis I felt it myself. A sort of mind-numbing go-with-the-flow feeling when I just wanted to follow the path of least resistance, no matter how pointless, or wrong. I had seen its effect at the Evade the Question Time TV show, too — the front row were eating out of Kaine's hand, no matter what he said.'
'So what's the connection?'
'I felt it again in Mycroft's lab. It was only when Landen made a sarcastic comment that I twigged. The ovinator. We all thought the "ovine" part of it was to do with eggs, but it's not. It's to do with sheep. The ovinator transmits sub-alpha brain waves that inhibit free will and instil sheep-like tendencies into the minds of anyone close by. It can be tuned to the user so they are unaffected; it's possible that Goliath may have developed a long-range version called the Ovitron and an anti-serum. Mycroft thinks he probably invented it to transmit public health messages, but he can't remember. Goliath get hold of it, Stricknene gives it to Kaine -bingo. Parliament do everything Kaine asks. The only reason Formby is still anti-Yorrick is because he refuses to go anywhere near him.'
There was silence in the car.
'What can we do about it?'
'Mycroft's working on an ovi-negator that should cancel it out, but we carry on with our plans as before. The Elan - and win the Superhoop.'
'Even I'm finding this hard to believe,' murmured Millon, 'and that's a first for me.'
'How does it get us out of England?' asked Bowden.
I patted the briefcase that was sitting on my lap.
'With the ovinator on our side, no one will want to oppose.us.'
'I'm not sure that's morally acceptable,' said Bowden. 'I mean, doesn't that make us as bad as Kaine?'
'I think we should stop and talk this through,' added Millon.
'It's one thing making up stories about mind control experiments, but quite another actually using them.'
I opened the briefcase and switched the ovinator on.
'Who's with me to go to the Elan, guys?'
'Well, all right, then,' conceded Bowden, 'I guess I'm with you on this.'
'Millon?'
'I'll do whatever Bowden does.'
'It really does work, doesn't it?' observed Stig, giving a short snorty cough. I chuckled slightly myself, too.
Getting through the English checkpoint at Clifford was even easier than I had imagined. I went ahead with the ovinator in the briefcase and stood for some time at the border station, chatting to the duty guard and giving him and the small garrison a good soaking for half an hour before Bowden drove up with the ten trucks behind him.
'What are in those trucks?' asked the guard with a certain degree of torpidity in his voice.
'You don't need to look in the trucks,' I told him.
'We don't need to look in the trucks,' echoed the border guard.
'We can go through unimpeded.'