One of Our Thursdays Is Missing (Thursday Next 6)
Page 110
“Not as much as before,” said Drake, “but still more than WomFic and Dogma. The area is rich in metaphor, and whoever can send the most downriver is the wealthiest. Put simply: Whoever controls the Northern Genres controls the metaphor supply, and whoever controls the supply of metaphor controls Fiction. It’s not by chance that WomFic and Crime have fortythree percent of the Outland readership. If Squid Procedural had been positioned up here, everyone would be reading about Decapod Gumshoes, and loving it.”
“So why isn’t Racy Novel read more than Women’s Fiction? If he sends more metaphor downriver, I mean?”
“Because of sanctions,” said Drake, looking at me oddly, “imposed by WomFic and Dogma—and pretty much everyone else. Like it or not, Racy Novel isn’t very highly thought of.”
“Is that fair?”
“You’re asking a lot of basic questions,” said Drake. “I thought Thursday Next would be well up on all this—especially if she’s here for the peace talks.”
“I need to gauge local opinion,” I said quickly. “This is Fiction, after all—interpretation trumps fact every time.”
“Oh,” said Drake, “I see.”
I excused myself, as Sprockett had just left the bar, and I caught up with him farther down the steamer, just outside the storeroom.
“Good afternoon, ma’am,” he whispered. “How is it going?”
“What are you doing here?”
“I’m the bar steward.”
“I can see that.”
“I knew you couldn’t actually let me go,” he said. “I’m too good a butler for that. So I simply assumed you were being compassionate and thought this trip too dangerous for you to take staff. So I came anyway. What do you want me to do?”
I took a deep breath. It seemed as though butlers were like flat feet, dimples and troublesome aunts—you’ve got them for life.
“There’s a mysterious passenger in Cabin Twelve. I want you to find out what he’s doing here.”
“He doesn’t do anything—he’s simply the MP-C12. Have you figured out who the fodder is yet?”
“It’s Drake.”
“Ooh. Will he be eaten by a crocodile? A poison dart in the eye?”
“Just find out what you can about the mysterious passenger, would you? I overheard him say, ‘I won’t take your place at the talks,’ and it might be significant.”
“Very good, ma’am. I’ll make inquiries.”
36.
Middle Station
For those of you who have tired of the glitzy world of shopping and inappropriate boyfriends in Chick Lit, a trip to Dubious Lifestyle Advice might be the next step. An hour in the hallowed halls of invented ills will leave you with at least ten problems you never knew you had, or even knew existed.
Bradshaw’s BookWorld Companion (7th edition)
It took us an hour to steam through Comedy, and whilst mostly light and airy and heard-it-beforeish, the atmosphere became more strained and intimidating as we chugged slowly through Mother-in-Law Jokes and Sexist Banter. Despite being advised to remain out of sight, I elected to stay on deck and brazen out the worst abuses that came shouted unseen from the thick trees that covered the riverbank. The two ladies of negotiable affection had no difficulty with the comments, having heard much worse before, and simply retorted with aplomb—delicately countering the more vulgar insinuations with amusing attacks on the male psyche and various aspersions on their manhood or ability.
We came across the Middle Station at noon. The small trading town was right on the point where the Double Entendre River becomes the Innuendo, and although we had been traveling through the buffer genre of Bawdy Romp, replete with amusing sketches of people running in and out of each other’s bedrooms in a retro-amusing manner, we were now very much within the influence of Racy Novel, and we all knew it. The first part of the journey had been a pleasing chug up the river, but now we were here for business, and a sense of brooding introspection had fallen upon the boat.
The arrival of the paddle steamer at the Middle Station was welcomed not by sound but by silence. The constant tramp-tramp-tramp of the engines, for five hours a constant background chorus, made things seem deafeningly quiet when the engines were stopped. I stood on the foredeck as the steamer drifted towards the jetty. The Middle Station, usually a throbbing hub of activity, seemed deserted. Drake stood next to me, his hand on the butt of his revolver.
“I’m going ashore to check this out,” I said, “and I think it would be better if you stayed here.”
“Au contraire, Miss Next. It is you who will be staying here.” There seemed no easy way to say this, so I came right out with it.
“Drake,” I said in a quiet voice, “you’re the fodder, due for a tragic yet potentially heroic end.”