I wasn’t supposed to be there, so the answer had to be no. “No.”
They stared at me. “The officers involved told us that someone of your description had a robotic butler in the trunk of a taxi. Do you still deny this?”
I looked at Sprockett, who stared impassively ahead.
“There are probably hundreds of robotic manservants in Fiction,” I replied, “and all of them are technically luggage. But since automatons are incapable of misstatements, why don’t you ask him yourself?”
They did, and Sprockett could answer without lying that he had absolutely no knowledge of the trip at all.
“Perhaps it was Thursday herself,” I suggested. “Have you asked her?”
There was, perhaps, a subtle change in the Plaids’ demeanor. But if she was missing, as I supposed, they weren’t going to let on.
“How about Conspiracy?” asked the smaller Plaid. “We have a report from Elvis561 that someone looking a lot like Thursday and holding her Jurisfiction shield rescued a mechanical man from stoning.”
“That was definitely me,” I said. “I was on JAID business.”
They both stared at me. It was highly uncomfortable.
“Then you did have her shield?”
“I used my JAID shield. Here.”
I passed it across, and they stared at it. It was nothing like a Jurisfiction shield.
“The Elvis must have been mistaken,” I continued. “There is a certain degree of inbuilt hyperbole to the genre that might generate outrageous claims, wouldn’t you agree?”
I stared at them intently as I tried to read their expressions, but their emotionless construction made them impossible to penetrate. They probably didn’t do well at singles bars but would doubtless be able to play poker at tournament level.
“Very well,” said the first Man in Plaid. “We will leave you for now. One more thing: A call to Thursday Next at Jurisfiction was traced to this book not ten minutes ago. Was there a reason for this?”
“I have a new understudy,” I explained. “I thought Thursday might like to give her a few tips on how to play her. If you see her, will you pass my message along?”
“We’re not messengers,” said the second Plaid, and they left without another word.
There followed a moment of silence. I had just lied to the Men in Plaid, which was illegal, and even if they thought I was telling the truth, my being on their radar was probably not conducive to good health. But one thing that did cross my mind was this: If Thursday was missing, the Men in Plaid had been ordered to find her, and they didn’t yet know of the connection between me and the red-haired gentleman.
But I didn’t have any time to muse on it further, as I heard the Read Alarm go off. Somewhere in the Outland, a reader had picked up one of my books. Luckily for us, things can happen instantaneously in the BookWorld, so I dashed through to the kitchen to find Carmine already dressed and ready to go. I half thought of taking over, but I had to let her give it a whirl sooner or later.
“It’s barely teatime in the Outland,” I said, glancing at the clock. “Someone must be taking a break. Are you ready?”
Carmine nodded.
I turned to Mrs. Malaprop, who was monitoring the progress of all the readings on a circular screen that plotted in word-for-word detail which readers were where, and in what book.
“It’s a slope oak,” she said. “Lost in a Good Book, page 133, SpecOps Twilight Homes. I’ll contract Granny Next.”
She flipped a switch on the intercom, and her voice echoed around the series on the intercom.
“Hear this, hear this. Would Granny Next please pro-seed Toe-wads TN2, P133.”
“An easy scene,” I said, turning to Carmine. “How’s your Ping-Pong?”
“Not bad.”
“It doesn’t matter. Granny Next will crush you anyway.”
“What is a ‘slope oak’?”