Part 1 (1/2)

The Blue Angel.

by Paul Magrs & Jeremy Hoad.

the blue angel arrives with thanks to...

Joy Foster, Louise Foster, Mark Magrs, Charles Foster, Peter Hoad, Rita Hoad, Jonathan Hoad, Rachel Hoad, Nicola Cregan, Michael Fox, Lynne Heritage, Pete Courtie, Brigid Robinson, Paul Arvidson, Jon Rolph, Antonia Rolph, Steve Jackson, Laura Wood, Alicia Stubbersfield, Sin Hansen, Paul Cornell, Bill Penson, Mark Walton, Sara Maitland, Meg Davis, Ewan Gillon, Amanda Reynolds, Richard Klein, Lucie Scott, Reuben Lane, Kenneth MacGowan, Georgina Hammick, Maureen Duffy, Vic Sage, Marina Mackay, Jayne Morgan, Louise D'Arcens, Julia Bell, Lorna Sage, Ashley Stokes, Steve Cole, Jac Rayner, Pat Wheeler, Kate Orman, Jonathan Blum, Dave Owen, Gary Russell, Alan McKee, Phillip Hallard, Nick Smale, Helen Fayle, Mark Phippen, Lance Parkin, Anna Whymark, Chloe Whymark, Stephen Hornby, Stewart Sheargold...

...and companions on the bus past and future...

Welcome to Valcea, everybody...

Love, Paul and Jeremy Spring 1999 Norwich

Chapter One.

Door's Stiff. Frozen...?

Door's stiff. Frozen?

I haven't been out the back for over a week. It's been too wet. Soaking. Chucking it down constantly. I've barely been out of the house. Sent the others out for shopping. I've kept the central heating on and hidden myself away. Only thing to do.

But I want to check on the garden. See what damage has been done. All that planting and transplanting and the tender loving care we gave it at the end of the summer. I want to see if the weather has ruined it all.

Today there's no rain. Too cold to rain. The sky is full and grey, the colour of Tupperware. Someone's put a Tupperware lid over the town.

Our garden is tiny, walled in by bushes and redbricked walls. You can't even see into next door's either side or over the back. We have a secret garden. In the few sunny days we've managed to have here, I sat in a deck chair and read, bang in the middle of the lawn. I sat for hours while Compa.s.sion set about making us a path from fragments of flagstone she found in the shrubbery. She can be a good little worker when she wants. She dug out a curving shape for the path and dug it quite deep. Filled it with the rubble and dust from chipped plaster that we had bags and bags of after we did the downstairs walls, and then she put the paving stones on top. Scooped the earth in and, hey presto, we had a path. She made it a curve so as not to disturb me from my reading, in my chair, in the middle of the garden. So it's in a kind of S-shape or, as Fitz has pointed out, a reversed question mark.

Actually, it's more than cold today. It's absolutely freezing. The gra.s.s is silvered and I can't smell the honeysuckle at all.

That's when I crouch to examine the herb garden, expecting the worst. The rosemary is dead, I can see that at a glance. Black in my hands, the needles like blades. And worst of all the bush that we moved to a place where it would be in shelter, treating it so carefully, so solicitously, even Fitz pitching in to help the wild thyme has been split right down the middle. Its branches are snapped. In two halves, both lolled flat on the ground. Quite dead.

I straighten up and sniff the air and realise that it's going to snow. This idea makes me s.h.i.+ver and that, I suppose, is because I've been dreaming about snow rather a lot lately. It's figured everywhere every scene I can recall having dreamed just recently. As if the seasons changed sooner in my nightmares.

There is a bang then as the window two storeys above my head is flung open. I look round to see Fitz glaring down, his palms on the wet sill. He isn't even dressed yet. In the T-s.h.i.+rt he slept in, his hair tangled up, unwashed, a furious look on his face. Three days' worth of stubble.

It was all some time ago. Now the worst had pa.s.sed and this was his quiet time. He hadn't had a funny spell in ages. He was still learning to be calm, however, and not let his mind tick over too quickly. His Doctor had warned him about the dangers of that. His private Doctor to whom he paid out vast sums of money. That Doctor worked from a Georgian town house by the North Park, across town.

One Doctor to another, eh?

Indeed. I hadn't thought of that.

Well, sometimes we all have to see a specialist.

And with a flourish, his private Doctor wrote him out an indecipherable prescription, at which he stared, all the way down the street, back into the centre of the town. He didn't know what he was taking, but the Doctor seemed to think these funny green pills were just the ticket.

I should be more curious. Don't you think, Fitz?

Oh, probably.

I used to be more curious, didn't I?

You used to be insatiably curious.

Hmm. I thought so.

He could still remember the things he said then, at the time he was having his funny spells. The things he went around saying in the thick of it all. But he couldn't remember where he had been, what he had done, exactly who he had said these things to. Still the words came back to him, thick and fast, his irrepressible words of warning. His gift of the gab, his sixth sense, his gift for being seventh son of a seventh son. He had the knowledge and wanted to pa.s.s it on. His words had the ineluctable force of truth and he had to let them out. But people never listen. They told him these words were lies, just his lies, and none of them convinced anyone.

That had made him more anxious than anything.

Anxious was exactly what he wasn't these days. He had learned to calm down.

Is the garden wrecked, Doctor?

My herb garden's looking a little shabby.

It's nearly winter. The whole lot would die then anyway.

No, no, no, Fitz. It would be all right. I'd see to it.

But it's too late now.

The thyme is split completely asunder.

What?

The wild thyme. Dead. Lolling on the gra.s.s.

It's too cold to hang about here all day. I'm going back to my book.

He remembered telling everyone who? about the men who were made out of gla.s.s. Whose hearts were scarlet and could be seen, pulsing, alive, through the sheeny see-through skin, muscle, sinew of their chests. These hearts, it could be plainly seen, had faces of their own malign and watchful faces. These men of gla.s.s sat in golden chairs which ran on wheels and shot bolts of fire at those who stood in their way.