I placed my hand on his shoulder.
'I've tried to make it more interesting,' he sobbed, 'but nothing seems to work. My wife won't speak to me, my job's on the line, drugs are flooding into Reading, and if I don't make the narrative even remotely readable then we all get demolished and there's nothing left at all except an empty hole on the bookshelf and the memory of a might-have-been in the head of the author.'
'Your wife only left you because all loner maverick detectives have domestic problems,' I explained. 'I'm sure she loves you really.'
'No, no, she doesn't,' he sobbed again. 'All is lost. Don't you see? It's customary for detectives to drive unusual cars and I had a wonderful 1924 Delage-Talbot Supersport. The idea was stolen and replaced with that dreadful Austin Allegro. If any scenes get deleted, we'll really be stuffed.'
He looked up at me.
'What's your name?'
'Thursday Next.'
He perked up suddenly.
'Thursday Next? The Outlander Jurisfiction agent apprenticed to Miss Havisham Thursday Next?'
I nodded. News travels fast in the Well.
An excited gleam came into his eye.
'I read about you in The Word. Tell me, would you have any way of finding out when the Book Inspectorate are due to read our story? I've lined up seven three-dimensional B-2 freelancers to come in and give the book a bit of an edge – just for an hour or so. With their help we might be able to hang on to it; all I need to know is the when.'
'I'm sorry, Mr Spratt.' I sighed. 'I'm new to all this; what exactly is the Council of Genres?'
'They look after fictional legislature,' he replied. 'Dramatic conventions, mainly. A representative from every genre sits on the council – it is they who decide the conventions of storytelling and it is they – through the Book Inspectorate – who decide whether an unpublished book is to be kept – or demolished.'
'Oh,' I replied, realising that the BookWorld was governed by almost as many rules and regulations as my own, 'then I can't help you.'
'What about Text Grand Central? Do you know anyone there?'
TGC I had heard of: they monitored the books in the Great Library and passed any textual problems on to us at Jurisfiction, who were purely a policing agency – but I knew no more than that. I shook my head again.
'Blast!' he muttered, staring at the ground. 'I've applied to the C of G for a cross-genre makeover but you might as well try and speak to the Great Panjandrum himself.'
'Why don't you change the book from within?' I asked.
'Change without permission?' he replied, shocked at my suggestion. 'That would mean rebellion. I want to get the C of G's attention but not like that – we'd be crushed in less than a chapter!'
'But if the inspectorate haven't been round yet,' I said slowly, 'then how would they even know anything had changed?'
He thought about this for a moment.
'Easier said than done – if I start to fool with the narrative it might all collapse like a pack of cards!'
'Then start small,' I proposed, 'change yourself first. If that works, you can try to bend the plot slightly.'
'Y-esss,' said Jack slowly. 'What did you have in mind?'
'Give up the booze.'
'How did you know about my drink problem?'
'All maverick loner detectives with domestic strife have drink problems,' I commented. 'Give up the liquor and go home to your wife.'
'That's not how I've been written,' replied Jack slowly. 'I just can't do it – it would be going against type – the readers—!'
'Jack, there are no readers. And if you don't at least try what I suggest, there never will be any readers – or any Jack Spratt. But if things go well, you might even be in … a sequel.'