Zambini
Towers
‘So what are my duties?’ asked Tiger as soon
as we were on our way.
‘Did you do any laundry at the
Sisterhood?’
He groaned audibly.
‘There’s that, and answering phones and
general running around, but not any cooking. We have Unstable Mabel
to do that for us. Stay out of her kitchen, by the way, she has a
nasty temper and is a demon shot with a soup ladle.’
‘Can’t the sorcerers do their own
laundry?’
‘They could, but they won’t. Their power has
to be conserved to be useful.’
‘I’m not sure I want to be called F7 by the
grumpy one.’
‘You’ll get used to it. She called me F6
until only a month ago.’
‘I’m not you. And besides, you still haven’t
told me what happened to Mr Zambini.’
‘Ooh,’ I said, turning up the radio to
listen to the Yogi Baird Radio Show. I
liked the show but didn’t really need to listen to it. I just
didn’t want to talk about Mr Zambini’s disappearance. At least, not
yet.
Twenty minutes later we pulled up outside
Zambini Towers, a large property that had once been the luxurious
Majestic hotel. It was the second-highest building in Hereford
after King Snodd’s Parliament, but was not so well maintained. The
guttering hung loose, the windows were grimy and cracked, and small
tufts of grass were poking out from the gaps between the
bricks.
‘What a dump,’ breathed Tiger as we trotted
into the entrance lobby.
‘We can’t really afford to bring it back to
a decent state. Mr Zambini bought it when he was still Great and
could conjure up an oak tree from an acorn in under a
fortnight.’
‘That one there?’ asked Tiger, pointing at a
sprawling oak that had grown in the centre of the lobby, its
gnarled roots and boughs elegantly wrapped around the old reception
desk and partially obscuring the entrance to the abandoned Palm
Court.
‘No, that was Half Price’s third-year
dissertation.’
‘Will he get rid of it?’
‘Fourth-year dissertation.’
‘Can’t you just wizard the building back into shape or
something?’
‘It’s too big, and they’re saving
themselves.’
‘For what?’
I shrugged.
‘To earn a crust. And what’s more, I think
they prefer it this way.’
We walked through the lobby, which was
decorated with trophies, paintings and certificates of achievements
long past.
‘The shabbiness adds a sense of faded
grandeur to the proceedings. And besides, when you don’t want to
draw attention to yourself, it’s better to look a bit down at heel.
Good morning, ladies.’
Two elderly women were on their way to the
breakfast rooms. They were dressed in matching shell suits and
cackled quietly to themselves.
‘This is the new foundling, Tiger Prawns,’ I
said. ‘Tiger, these are the Sisters Karamazov – Deirdre and
Deirdre.’
‘Why do they have the same name?’
‘They had an unimaginative father.’
They looked very carefully at Tiger, and
even prodded him several times with long bony fingers.
‘Ha-ho,’ said the least ugly of the two,
‘will you scream when I stick you with a pin, you little piglet
you?’
I caught Tiger’s eye and shook my head, to
convey they didn’t mean anything.
‘Prawns?’ said Deirdre. ‘Is that a Mother
Zenobia name?’
‘Yes, ma’am,’ replied Tiger politely. ‘The
Blessed Ladies of the Lobster often use crustacean names for the
foundlings.’
The sisters looked at me.
‘You’ll educate him well, Jennifer?’
‘To the best of my ability.’
‘We don’t want another . . .
incident.’
‘No, indeed.’
And they hobbled off, grumbling to one
another about the problem with spaghetti.
‘They used to earn good money on weather
prediction,’ I told Tiger as soon as they were out of earshot, ‘a
skill now relegated to little more than a hobby after the
introduction of computerised weather mapping. Don’t stand next to
them out of doors. A lifetime’s work in weather manipulation has
made them very attractive to lightning. In fact, Deirdre has been
struck by lightning so many times it has addled her brain and I
fear she might be irredeemably insane.’
‘Winsumpoop bibble bibble,’ said Deirdre as
they vanished into the dining room.
‘This place is mad,’ remarked Tiger, ‘even
when compared to the Sisterhood. I’m stuck for nine years with a
bunch of lunatics.’
‘You’ll get used to it.’
‘I won’t.’
I was confident that he would. For all the
shortage of funds, bad plumbing, peeling wallpaper, erratic
incantations and dodgy spells, Kazam was fun. The sorcerers spent much of their time talking
fondly about the good old days, and telling tales of past triumphs
and disasters with equal enthusiasm. Of the days when magic was
powerful, unregulated by government, and even the largest spell
could be woven without filling out the spell release form B1-7G.
When they weren’t reminiscing they spent their time in silent
contemplation or practising weird experimental stuff that I was
happier not knowing about.
‘I’ll show you to your room.’
We walked down the corridor to where the
elevators had once been. They had not worked for as long as anyone
could remember, and the ornate bronze doors were wedged open,
revealing a long drop to the sub-basements below.
‘Shouldn’t we take the stairs?’ asked
Tiger.
‘You can if you want. It’s quicker to just
shout out loud the floor you want, and hop into the lift
shaft.’
Tiger looked doubtful so I said ‘TEN’ and
stepped into the void. I fell upwards to the tenth floor and
stepped out as soon as the fall was over. I waited for a moment,
then peered down the shaft. Far below I could see a small face
staring up at me.
‘Remember to shout “TEN”,’ I called down,
‘it’s a lot quicker than the stairs.’
There was a terrified yell as he fell
towards me, and this turned into a laugh as he stopped outside the
elevator entrance. He struggled for a moment to get out, missed his
moment and fell back to the ground floor again with a yell. He
didn’t get out there either, and fell back up to the tenth floor,
where I grabbed his hand and pulled him in before he spent the
afternoon falling backwards and forwards – as I had done when I
first got here.
‘That was fun,’ he said, trembling with a
mixture of fear and excitement. ‘What if I change my mind
halfway?’
‘Then you go to whatever floor you want.
It’s falling fast today. Must be the dry air.’
‘How does it work?’
‘It’s a standard Ambiguity enchantment – in
this instance, the difference between “up” and “down”. Carpathian
Bob left it to us in his will. The last spell of a dying wizard.
Powerful stuff. You’ll be in Room 1039. It’s got an echo but, on
the plus side, it is
self-cleaning.’
I opened the door to his room and we walked
in. The room was large and light and, like most of Zambini Towers,
shabby. The wallpaper was stained and torn, the woodwork warped and
unsightly damp patches had appeared on the ceiling. I watched as
Tiger’s face relaxed into a smile, and he blinked away the tears.
At the convent, he would have been used to sharing a dormitory with
fifty other boys. To anyone else, Room 1039 would have been a hovel
– to the foundlings of the Sisterhood, it was luxury. I walked
across to the window and removed the cardboard covering a broken
pane to let in some fresh air.
‘The tenth floor is fully teenager
compliant,’ I said, ‘nothing will ever be out of place.’
To demonstrate, I moved the blotter on the
desk slightly off kilter, and a second or two later it realigned
itself. I then dug a handkerchief from my pocket and threw it on
the carpet. As soon as it hit the floor it fluttered off to the top
drawer of the bureau like a butterfly, folding itself as it
went.
‘Don’t ask me how it works or who cast it,
but be warned: enchantments have no intelligence. They follow spell
sub-routines without any form of discretion. If you were to fall
over in here you’d find yourself tidied away into the wardrobe, as
likely as not on a coat hanger.’
‘I’ll be careful.’
‘Wise words. You can use the self-tidying
feature, but don’t overuse it. Every
spell is a drain on the power that runs through the building. If
everyone were untidy, the speed of
magic would slow dramatically. A handkerchief would self-fold in an
hour, and the perpetual teapot would run dry. The same is true of
the elevator. Play with it for too long and it’ll slow down and
stop. I was stuck between floors once when Wizard Moobin was trying
out one of his alchemy spells. Think of Zambini Towers as a giant
battery of wizidrical power, constantly on trickle charge. If used
a lot, it will soon run out. Used sparingly, it can go on all day.
Is this room okay?’
‘Do people knock when they want to use the
bath?’ he asked, staring into the marble-and-faded-gilt
bathroom.
‘Every room has its own bathroom,’ I told
him.
He looked at me, astonished that such
extravagance not only existed, but would be offered to him.
‘A bed, a window, a bedside light
and a bathroom?’ he said with a grin,
‘It’s the best room I’ll ever have!’
‘Then I’ll leave you to settle in. Come down
to the Avon Suite on the ground floor when you’re ready and I’ll
tell you what’s what. Don’t worry if you hear odd noises at night,
the floor may be covered with toads from time to time, stay out of
the second sub-basement and never, never, ask to go to the thirteenth floor. Oh, and
you mustn’t look back if ever you pass the Limping Man. See you
later.’
I was barely out of the door when I heard a
cry from Tiger. I put my head back into the room.
‘I saw a figure over there,’ he said,
pointing a trembling finger in the direction of the bathroom. ‘I
think it was a ghost.’
‘Phantasms are confined to the third floor.
You’ve just seen the echo I told you about.’
‘How can you see an echo?’
‘It’s not sound, it’s visual.’
To demonstrate I walked to the other side of
the room, paused for ten seconds and then walked back. Sure enough,
a pale outline of myself appeared a few seconds later.
‘The longer you stay in one place, the more
powerful the echo. I don’t know why the tenth floor does it, but
the self-tidying makes up for it. Unless you want to change?’
‘Are the other rooms any less weird?’
‘Not really.’
‘Then this is fine.’
‘Good. I’ll see you downstairs when you’re
ready.’
Tiger looked around the room
nervously.
‘Wait a moment while I unpack.’
He took from his pocket a folded tie and
placed it in one of the drawers.
‘I’m done.’
And he followed me down the lift shaft, but
this time with a little more confidence, and with a little less
shouting.
‘Can you do any
magic?’ he asked as we walked past the shuttered ballroom on our
way to the Avon Suite.
‘Everyone can do a bit,’ I said, wondering where Kevin Zipp had got
to. ‘If you are thinking of somebody and the phone rings and it’s
them, that’s magic. If you get a curious feeling that you’ve been
or done something before, then that’s magic too. It’s everywhere.
It seeps into the fabric of the world and oozes out as coincidence,
fate, chance, luck or what have you. The big problem is making it
work for you in some useful manner.’
‘Mother Zenobia used to say that magic was
like the gold that is mingled in sand,’ observed Tiger, ‘worth a
lot of money but useless since you can’t extract it.’
‘She’s right. But if you have magic within
you, were properly trained and the sort of person who could channel
their mind, then it is possible a career in sorcery might be the
thing for you. Were you tested?’
‘Yes, I was a 162.8.’
‘I’m a 159.3,’ I told him, ‘so pretty
useless the pair of us.’
You have to have 350 or more before anyone
gets interested. You’ve either got it or you haven’t – a bit like
being able to play a piano or go backwards on a unicycle while
juggling seven clubs.
‘You and me and Unstable Mabel are the only
sane ones in the building, and I have my doubts about Mable. Don’t
feel left out or anything by being normal.’
‘I’ll try not to.’
I opened the door to the Kazam offices and
flicked on the light. The Avon Suite was large but seemed
considerably smaller owing to a huge amount of clutter. There were
filing cabinets, desks where once sat now-long-redundant agents,
tables, piles of paperwork, back issues of Spells magazine, several worn-out sofas and, in the
corner, a moose. It chewed softly on some grass and stared at us
laconically.
‘That’s the Transient Moose,’ I said,
looking through the mail, ‘an illusion that was left as a practical
joke long before I got here. He moves randomly about the building
appearing now and then, here and there to this one and that one.
We’re hoping he’ll wear out soon.’
Tiger went up to the moose and placed a hand
on its nose. His hand went through the creature as though it were
smoke. I took the papers off a nearby desk and placed them on a
third, pushed up a swivel chair and showed Tiger how to use the
phone system.
‘You can answer from anywhere in the hotel.
If I don’t pick up, then you should. Take a message and I’ll call
them back.’
‘I’ve never had a desk,’ said Tiger, looking
at the desk fondly.
‘You’ve got one now. See that teapot on the
sideboard over there?’
He nodded.
‘That’s the perpetual teapot I mentioned
earlier. It’s always full of tea. The same goes for the biscuit
tin. You can help yourself.’
Tiger got the subtle hint. I told him I
liked my tea with half a sugar, and he trotted off to the steaming
teapot to fetch some.
‘There’re only two biscuits left,’ said
Tiger in dismay, staring into the biscuit tin.
‘We’re on an economy drive. Instead of an
enchanted biscuit tin that’s always full, we’ve got an enchanted
biscuit tin with always only two left. You’d be amazed at how much
wizidrical energy we save.’
‘Right,’ said Tiger, taking out the two
biscuits, closing the lid and then finding two new biscuits when he
opened it again.
‘The economy drive explains why they’re
plain and not sweet, right?’
‘Right.’
‘Quark.’
‘What is it?’
The Quarkbeast pointed one of its sharpened
claws at a bundle of old clothes on one of the sofas. I went and
had a closer look. It was the Remarkable Kevin Zipp. He was fast
asleep and snoring quietly to himself.
‘Good morning, Kevin,’ I said cheerily. He
blinked, stared at me, then sat up. ‘How is the job in Leominster
going?’
I was referring to some work I had found him
in a flower nursery, predicting the colours of blooms in
ungerminated bulbs. He was one of our better pre-cognitives,
usually managing a strike rate of 72 per cent or more.
‘Well, thank you,’ muttered the small man.
His clothes were shabby to the point of being little more than
rags, but he was exceptionally well presented in spite of it. He
was clean shaven, washed and his hair was fastidiously tidy. He
looked like an accountant on his way to a fancy-dress party as a
vagrant.
I could see that ungerminated bulbs were not
the cause of his visit, and whenever a pre-cog gets nervous, I get
nervous.
‘This is Tiger Prawns,’ I said, ‘the seventh
foundling.’
Kevin took Tiger’s hand in his and stared
into his eyes.
‘Don’t get in a blue car on a
Thursday.’
‘Which Thursday?’
‘Any Thursday.’
‘What kind of car?’
‘A blue one. On a Thursday.’
‘Okay,’ said Tiger.
‘So what’s this about a vision?’ I asked,
sorting through the mail.
‘It was a biggie,’ Kevin began
nervously.
‘Oh yes?’ I returned pleasantly, having
heard a lot of predictions that never came to anything, but also
having heard some chilling ones that did.
‘You know Maltcassion, the Dragon?’ he
asked.
‘Not personally.’
‘Of him, then.’
I knew of him, of course. Everybody did. The
last of his kind, he lived up in the Dragonlands not far from here,
although you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who could say they
had caught a glimpse of the reclusive beast. I took the tea that
Tiger handed me and placed it on my desk.
‘What about him?’
Kevin took a deep breath.
‘I saw him die. Die by the sword of a
Dragonslayer.’
‘When?’
He narrowed his eyes.
‘Certainly within the next week.’
I stopped opening the mail – mostly junk
anyway, or bills – and looked over to where Kevin Zipp was staring
at me intently. The importance of the information wasn’t lost on
him, and it wasn’t lost on me either. By ancient decree the
Dragon’s land belonged to whoever claimed it as soon as the Dragon
died, so there was always an unseemly rush for real estate which
eclipsed a Dragon’s death. Within a day every square inch of land
would be claimed. In the following months there would be legal
wranglings, then the construction would begin. New roads, housing
and power, retail parks and industrial units. All would cover the
unspoilt lands in a smear of tarmac and concrete. A
four-hundred-year-old wilderness gone for ever.
‘I heard that when Dragon Dunwoody died
twenty-seven years ago,’ said Tiger, who was fairly up on Dragons,
as you would be, growing up so close to the Dragonlands, ‘the crowd
surge resulted in sixty-eight people dead in the stampede.’
Kevin and I exchanged glances. The death of
the last Dragon would be a matter of some consequence.
‘How strong was this?’ I asked.
‘On a scale of one to ten,’ replied Zipp,
‘it was a twelve. Most powerful premonition I’ve ever felt. It was
as though the Mighty Shandar himself had called me up
person-to-person and reversed the
charges. I can detect it on low-alpha as well as the wider brain
wavelengths. I doubt I’m the only person picking this up.’
I doubted it too. I phoned Randolph, 14th
Earl of Pembridge, the only other pre-cog on our books. Randolph,
or EP-14 as he was sometimes known, was not only minor Hereford
aristocracy, but an industrial prophet who worked for Consolidated
Useful Stuff (Steel) PLC, predicting failure rates on industrial
welding.
‘Randolph, it’s Jennifer.’
‘Jenny, D’girl! I thought you’d call.’
‘I’ve got the Remarkable Kevin Zipp with me
and I wondered if—’
He didn’t need any prompting. He had picked
up the same thing but had also furnished a time and date. Next
Sunday at noon. I thanked him and replaced the phone.
‘Anything else?’
‘Yes,’ replied Kevin. ‘Two words.’
‘And they are?’
‘Big Magic.’
‘What does that mean?’
He told me he didn’t know, and I understood.
He only saw the visions; it was up to others to interpret them. In
the absence of any good interpretation, they could generally be
explained by events or, failing that, hindsight.
‘Before I go,’ he said, pulling a rumpled
piece of paper from his pocket, ‘these are for you.’
He handed the grubby piece of paper not to
me, but to Tiger.
He scanned the note. It didn’t seem to mean
anything at all.
Smith
7, 11, and
13
Ulan Bator
He read the note, then lowered the piece of
paper.
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Me neither.’ Zipp shrugged. ‘Isn’t seeing
the future a hoot?’
Tiger looked at me and I nodded to him that
he should take it seriously.
‘Thank you, sir,’ said Tiger with a
bow.
‘Well, there you have it,’ said Kevin, and
he left in a hurry as he had felt a good tip on Baron, a
six-year-old mare running in the Hereford Gold Stakes
Handicap.
The phone rang and I picked it up, listened
for a few moments and scribbled a note on a standard form.
‘This is a form B2-5C,’ I told Tiger, ‘for a
minor spell of less than a thousand Shandars. I need you to take it
up to the Mysterious X in Room 245 and tell them that I sent you
and we need this job done as soon as possible.’
He took the form and stared at me
nervously.
‘Who, exactly, is the Mysterious X?’
‘They’re more of a what than a who. It
won’t be in a form you’ll recognise, and there is something
other about X that defies easy
explanation. It’s more of a sense than a person. A shroud, if you
like, that confuses their true form. It also smells of unwashed
socks and peanut butter. You’ll be fine.’
Tiger looked at the note, then at the
Quarkbeast, then at where the moose had been but suddenly wasn’t,
then back at me.
‘This is a test, isn’t it?’
He was smart, this one. I nodded.
‘You can be back with the Sisterhood by
teatime, and no one will have thought any the worse of you. I’ll
let you in on a secret. You weren’t sent to me as a punishment, nor
by chance. Mother Zenobia is an ex-sorceress herself, and only
sends those she deems truly exceptional. Aside from the fifth
foundling – the one we don’t talk about – she’s never been
wrong.’
‘So was all that stuff about the Limping
Man, the thirteenth floor, the second sub-basement and being flown
in a cardboard box also part of the test?’
‘No, that was for real. And that’s just the
weird stuff I can remember right now. We haven’t even got started
on emergency procedures yet.’
‘Right,’ he said and, after taking a deep
breath, he left the room. He was back again a few moments
later.
‘This job,’ he said, waving the form B2-5C
nervously, ‘is it something to do with Dark Forces?’
‘There’s no such thing as the “Forces of
Darkness”, despite what you read in the storybooks. There are no
“Dark Arts” or “wizards pulled to the dark side”. There is only the
Good or Bad that lurks in the heart of Man. And in answer to your
question, X’s job is a cat stuck up a tree. He’ll grumble, but
he’ll do it.’