Изменить стиль страницы

“Nasty,” said the lady in the straw hat.

“They’re not so bad,” said the Elephant Man, “if you have them pan-fried with plenty of garlic”

“Silence!” Will’s other self raised his hand, and a heavy silence fell. He cast another withering glance that became a withering stare. “I have suffered as no man should suffer, but I will suffer no more. I have travelled into the past and into the future. Not the future you came from, nor the one I came from, but another future entirely. The future that I will create for myself tonight.”

“How?” Will managed to ask. “How did you travel through time?”

“I think I know,” said Barry. “I have a very bad feeling about this.”

“In here,” the other Will tapped at his forehead, “I have communion and conversation with my Holy Guardian. Tonight we will put the world to right. The world that this man,” and he pointed at Rune, “that this man has put to wrong.”

“Me?” quoth Rune. “I mean, I? I mean, one?”

“You,” said the other Will. “You are responsible for all of this, the Victorian super technology that should never have existed. You changed the course of history by introducing Mr Babbage to the Queen at the Great Exhibition.”

“It seemed like the right thing to do,” said Rune. “And it was.”

“So that it should benefit you. You, with your Book of Rune that predicted future events, that would find you worshipped in the future I grew up in, as some kind of messiah.”

“That was hardly my intention.” Rune dusted down his raiment. “But praise where praise is due, I suppose.”

“And yet you still live,” the other Will made fists, “even though I hacked you to pieces.”

“You?” managed Will.

“Me,” said the other Will. “And those Whitechapel whores. I wasn’t lying when the police found me covered in blood. I was a trifle overexcited. But then, being Jack the Ripper was a rather exciting experience.”

“I knew it was him,” said Sherlock Holmes to Dr Watson.

“No shit, Sherlock,” the doctor replied. “You knew it was him?”

“Everybody knows it was him,” said the lady in the straw hat. “I was at his trial and it was in all the papers. There’s a big reward for his capture, but I don’t fancy making a citizen’s arrest. Has anyone seen that big bargee?”

“Why?” Will managed once more.

“You really are monosyllabic,” said his other self. “And really stupid, too. But then, if it hadn’t been for you getting me drunk for the first time in my life I would never have acquired the knowledge and conversation of my Holy Guardian.”

“It’s Larry, chief,” said Barry. “My wayward brother. This is all his fault.”

“Why?” asked Will once more. “Why did you murder those women?”

“All part of this.” The other Will threw wide his arms. “This isn’t just any old anti-gravitational flying circus powered through the wireless transmission of electrical energy, you know. This is a very special construction. And it wasn’t so much built, as grown, in my new improved future, for this very special moment. All of this.” He twirled about upon his heels, and did a bit of a moonwalk. “Even now it evolves.” He stamped his feet. “No noise,” said he. “No sound. Nothing more enters, nothing leaves. A closed system, Will. The past will change and so will the future, but this little system will not. It is immune. Advanced technology, founded upon magical principles, created by myself, with the aid of my Holy Guardian helper, to ensure that mankind gets the future it really deserves. Which is to say, the future I deserve.”

“You deserve a smack,” said Will.

“But not from you. Allow me to explain just what is going to happen, what this ‘Doomsday Programme’ is really all about. It has nothing to do with altering the past. That is something which I will deal with personally. The programme will, how shall I put this, spread a little love. In fact it will spread a whole lot of love. Which is why my Holy Guardian is so enthusiastic. It will spread love all around the world.”

“I suspect that it will do a great deal more than that,” seethed Will.

“Well, just a tad.” The other Will placed a hand upon his heart and made an angelic upturned face. “It will spread the world’s love towards me. I have been so unloved, you see. But no more. From the moment that the spell is activated, anyone who meets me will love me. Isn’t that wonderful? And so fair, considering all that I’ve been through. I will be the object of love for everyone. And everyone will want to please me. I shall become the most popular and all-loved leader of all time. The most popular and loved world leader. The first ever world leader. King of the world, ma.”

“Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear,” said Barry. “Larry’s fouled it up big time, this time.”

“You’re insane,” Will seethed a little more. “And if all you want is love, why did you have to murder those women?”

The other Will smiled. “It’s the question that everybody wants to know the answer to, isn’t it? Why did Jack the Ripper do what he did? Here, come and let me whisper.”

Will took faltering forward steps. He leaned towards his other self, but not too closely. He hadn’t forgotten about what happened to David Warner in Time Cop. How two yous must never, upon any account, come into contact, for fear of terrible cosmic consequences.

The other Will whispered words into Will’s ear.

“And that’s it?” said Will.

The other Will nodded.

“But it’s so obvious. Hideous and fiendish, but obvious.”

The other Will shrugged. “But no one ever figures it out.”

“What did he say?” Barry asked. “I didn’t catch it.”

“Tell you later,” said Will.

“Regretfully not,” said Will’s other self. “Because there will be no later for you. When Colonel William Starling dies, you will cease to exist.”

“You too,” said Will.

“No, not me. I have worked it all out. Only you will cease to exist. One hundred years from now SF enthusiasts will still be debating over exactly how I worked it out. But work it out, I did. And—” He perused his wristwatch. It wasn’t a Babbage, it was a Casio. “Less than a minute to go; time to make the sacrifice and employ the Millennial Love Bug.”

“It’s a Centennial Love Bug,” said Tim.

“What?” the other Will glared at Tim.

“Nothing,” said Tim. “It’s just that I haven’t had anything to say for a while. Where is your computer, by the way?”

“My computer?” The other Will laughed, loudly, wildly, madly, in the manner that super-criminals so often do. “I have control here,” he said. “Control of these,” and he booted another pinch-faced woman. “Because they fear me. They fear my supernatural powers, that I can be here.” And the other Will was here. “Or there.” And he was suddenly over there.

“Larry showing off,” said Barry. “And he’s cheating all over the place. The Big Figure is going to be very upset about this. I wouldn’t even be surprised if He chose to intervene.”

“A deus ex machina ending,” said Will. “That will do for me.”

“What did you say?” The other Will was now here again.

“Nothing,” said Will. “Pray continue with your most interesting narrative.”

“Nice line,” whispered Holmes to Watson. “Make a note of it.”

“I know you’ve had spies looking for the computer system,” said the other Will. “But they won’t have found it, nor the programme that I formulated in my new, improved future. The programme is here,” and he plucked a tiny disc from his pocket.

“And the computer?” Tim asked. “I did ask about the computer.”

“Right here.” Will’s other self beckoned Count Otto to his feet, tore off the showman’s great fur hat, and then tore off the top of his head.

The crowd did gaspings.

“I still haven’t the faintest idea what’s going on,” said the lady in the straw hat. “But that was unexpected.”

“The real Count Otto had to go,” said the other Will. “There can be only one King of the witches. So I deposed him.”