The Eyre Affair_ A Novel - Jasper Fforde [439]
“Lola is that important to me,” I said somberly. Miss Havisham had told me to use the nugget wisely—I think I did.
“Is it enough?”
“It’s enough,” said the vendor, picking up the nugget and staring at it avariciously through an eyeglass. “This lot is withdrawn from the sale. Miss Next, you are the proud owner of a Generic.”
Lola nearly wet herself, poor girl, and she hugged me tightly during the five minutes it took to complete the paperwork.
We found Randolph sitting on a bollard down by the docks, staring off into the Text Sea with a sad and vacant look in his eyes. Lola leaned down and whispered in his ear.
Randolph jumped and turned round, flung his arms around her and cried for joy.
“Yes,” he said, “yes, I did mean it! Every bit of it!”
“Come on, lovebirds,” I told them, “I think it’s time to leave this cattle market.”
We walked back to Caversham Heights, Randolph and Lola holding hands, making plans to start a home for Generics who had fallen on hard times, and trying to think up ways to raise funding. Neither of them had the resources to undertake such a project, but it got me thinking.
The following week and soon after the Bellman inauguration, I gave my proposal to the Council of Genres—Caversham Heights should be bought by the Council and used as a sanctuary for characters who needed a break from the sometimes arduous and repetitive course that fictional people are forced to tread. A sort of textual summer camp. To my delight the Council approved the measure, as it had the added bonus of a solution to the nursery rhyme problem. Jack Spratt was overjoyed at the news and didn’t seem in the least put out by the massive changes that would be necessary to embrace the visitors.
“The drug plot is out, I’m afraid,” I told him as we discussed it over lunch a few days later.
“What the hell,” he exclaimed, “I was never in love with it anyway. Do we have a replacement boxer?”
“The boxing plot is out, too.”
“Ah. How about the money-laundering subplot where I discover the mayor has been taking kickbacks? That’s still in, yes?”
“Not . . . as such,” I said slowly.
“It’s gone, too? Do we even have a murder?”
“That we have.” I passed him the new outline I had been thrashing out with a freelance imaginator the previous day.
“Ah!” he said, scanning the words eagerly. “It’s Easter in Reading—a bad time for eggs—and Humpty-Dumpty is found shattered beneath a wall in a shabby area of town. . . .”
He flicked a few more pages. “What about Dr. Singh, Madeleine, Unidentified Police Officers 1 and 2 and all the others?”
“All still there. We’ve had to reassign a few parts, but it should hold together. The only person who wouldn’t move was Agatha Diesel—I think she might give you a few problems.”
“I can handle her,” replied Jack, flicking to the back of the outline to see how it all turned out. “Looks good to me. What do the nurseries say about it?”
“I’m talking to them next.”
I left Jack with the outline and jumped to Norland Park, where I took the news to Humpty-Dumpty; he and his army of pickets were still camped outside the doors of the house—they had been joined by characters from nursery stories, too.
“Ah!” said Humpty as I approached. “The Bellman. The three witches were right after all.”
“They generally are,” I replied. “I have a proposal for you.”
Humpty’s eyes grew bigger and bigger as I explained what I had in mind.
“Sanctuary?” he asked.
“Of sorts,” I told him. “I’ll need you to coordinate all the nurseries who will find narrative a little bit alien after doing couplets for so long, so you’ll be dead when the story opens.”
“Not . . . the wall thing?”
“I’m afraid so. What do you think?”
“Well,” said Humpty, reading the outline carefully and smiling, “I’ll take it to the membership, but I think I can safely say that there is nothing here that we can find any great issue with. Pending a ballot, I think you’ve got yourself a deal.”
It took the C of G almost a year to scrap the pristine and unused Ultra Word engines, and many more arrests followed, although sadly, none in the