Chapter 16
At Home in Britiniacum
We were all ready when the bell announcing agent John's arrival
rang. Tea was laid in a pleasant room off the peristylium: dim
and cool, out of the fierce spring sun. Two chairs were ready,
George and Freya were standing by, I was waiting for some
explanations. George let him in and I shook his hand rather
formally in the atrium. He was dressed-up in a beige linen
jacket and matching trousers, white shirt, striped tie and
handmade brown leather shoes, all topped off with a Panama hat:
the 'our overseas correspondent on a special mission in the
tropics' look. He radiated debonair smugness.
Teacup in hand, leaning back in his seat, brow furrowed in due
seriousness and with a fatuous smile he began his pitch.
'Well, how do you like it here? Just the place for a chap like
you. Sorry there's no electrical system or central heating, but
we manage, we manage. Had it on very good terms.'
'…'
'Well, you can now stay here as long as you want. I've arranged
for you to have Citizen of Britiniacum Status. Now you can leave
Britiniacum and re-enter whenever you want: a rare privilege.
Don't worry about that.'
'…'
'Oh, them. Well they can both stay here and leave if they want.
However, they won't be allowed to re-enter without special
permission. They don't have Citizen Status. If they stay here
for five years and don't cause any trouble, in which case they
would be immediately expelled anyway, they will be eligible to
apply for it but would need a sponsor, such as yourself.'
'…'
'Well, look at it this way: they have free board and lodging
here so all they need is a little pocket money. A few Sol cents
a month is enough, quite enough…'
'…'
'Actually, you can purchase the lease if you want, but there is
hardly any need. Yes, we can only get leases here, no freehold,
sorry. This place's lease had terminated and so it was available
to get.
'…'
'Well, ninety-nine years is the maximum.'
'…'
'Great staff, eh? Very conscientious. By the way, checked the
freckles yet?'
'…'
'Well, what are you waiting for? She's a healthy young woman, it
wouldn't do her any harm at all. Anyway it would be nice to have
some children here, very suitable. Give the place life. I'm sure
she has already thought it all out; don't kid yourself. Anyway,
if it's not you, it will just be someone else. Anyway we don't
want her doing a runner and joining the Orphic cult, do we? See
what I mean?'
'…'
'Yes, well, that's really what I've come about. By the way, our
friend Mr. B may be a slimy customer but who could be put
in his place? Not you, not your style. How about his number two,
Andy Patel?'
'…'
'No? Well, anyway, we're thinking more in terms of just trimming
his wick, as it were. Getting rid of his bully boys and
replacing them with some of Montafian's people, for instance. I
don't think those drones of yours have much potential. Better to
keep things going the way they are and keep that reactor going,
you agree? Don't want everything to fall to pieces.'
'…'
'Don't worry, I'm sure you will be able to get the robot back
intact. Anyway, you have plenty of money at your disposal now, I
believe. You can get yourself another one. Even a whole gang of
them, haha.'
'…'
'Anyway, we were thinking you might be able to help us with
automation of our means of production here in Britiniacum. We
heard you've done a lot of work on reactor maintenance at Deva.'
'…'
'I knew we could count on you, James. That's just great. And
there's a lot to do. We have big projects. As we see it, now
there's a currency solution, and that's thanks to you, the next
big thing is going to be transport. Our Airtrucks are wonderful,
but they're only really suitable for high-value goods and
people. Heavy bulky goods needs land transport, and that's a
problem we need to solve, right now. As there are no roads in
proper condition, and pneumatic tyres cost a fortune anyway, we
are thinking about using the disused railway lines. Here, there
are two lines of thought, James: use the existing steel rails or
a hovertrain with a guideway. The first is real nineteenth
century heavy engineering stuff, but a hovertrain uses more like
aircraft engineering, and that's something we know all about.'
'…'
'Great! Are you free on Thursday morning? I'll show your round.
Careful with the people doing the aircraft though, don't want
them getting all jealous now, do we?'
'…'
'Well, actually, Meg is getting a little impatient. “Got to stop
him implementing that AI stuff” she says, and “No time to
lose.”'
'…'
'I'll tell her that then. How long do you think it will take to
get one from Japan?'
'…'
'Well if it's already pre-ordered, shouldn't take too long. I'll
try to get Meg to understand that. By the way, I hear that those
robots can be fantastic fighters, a bit scary actually.'
'…'
'The Code? Yes, I've heard of it. So that's alright then. You
sure?'
'…'
'Actually, there is something else that I wanted to talk to you
about. Do you remember what I told you about the Way of
Mithras?'
'…'
'I'm not religious either, James, but there are things I believe
in. I think you will agree that some things are true and some
are not, right?'
'…'
'Me too, and, if you will permit me, that's belief in something.
You and I believe that the world is a deterministic place, don't
we? Every rational person does. Well, that is the Way of
Mithras. Thing is, it's a bit scary to accept that life has no
meaning, this is just a space rock flying through a vacuum until
it meets disaster and all that. We do need to put a bit of magic
into it for us all to feel comfortable. See what I mean, James?
So we say that every follower of the Way of Mithras needs to do
one thing every day: perform an act of kindness to add to the
sum of human happiness in the world. Well, every Sunday you need
to have a little meeting in the shrine room and explain that to
your household about being able to see the truth in its stark
and terrible form, staring at the sun unblinking is how we
describe it, and humanise it by explaining the need for a daily
act of kindness, the Golden Rule, whatever. It's reason-based
faith! Oh! And, we do like a bit of merrymaking too. Every year
on the shortest day we have a festival called the Birth of
Mithras, something like the old Saturnalia of Rome when we
gather to have a feast and the roles of master and servant are
reversed. The early Christians pinched the idea and called it
Christmas, the Anglo-Saxon pagans called it Mōdraniht and other
Germanic peoples called it Yule. And that's something you'll
have to organise too.'
'…'
'Yes, I was wondering if you would ask me about that. The
Bacchic cult has some connection to old religions of the
classical age: Dionysus, Isis, Bacchus, Pan and that. Basically
it's a movement where anything goes. They all get together, get
drunk and have sex. No worries about the future. Let it all hang
out! Well, I've no objection to having some fun, but somebody
has to bake the bread, as it were. We can only hold together as
a community if we have discipline, unity, forward planning
etcetera. Without it we would be swept away. The people growing
potatoes at Orly would gobble us up in no time, not to mention
Montafian and Buonaventura. Where would we be then?...'
And agent John went on, now to get me to pay the rent as it
were, assuming that he had me spellbound by now.
'Pick up and interesting news while you were out there, James?'
'…'
'And does Montafian have a potential successor? What happens if
he's not there to run the show any longer?'
'…'
'Oh dear, that might compromise the whole golden Sol system
then. Not good, not good.'
'…'
'Well, thank you, James. So nice to have a little chat and catch
up. Actually, I'll have to be going now. I'll try to get Meg to
wait. And I'll get back to you about visiting the workshops.
Okay then, take care and let me know if you need anything.'
Well, that was instructive. While he had been talking, I'd had
an idea. I could, indeed, afford “a whole gang” of Japanese
androids now. And, if I remembered correctly, one Arthur
Buonaventura had placed a “special” order. I was willing to bet
that the fool had ordered a lookalike of himself, no doubt to
avoid assassination. If that were indeed the case, I could order
one too, replace him with it and make him an outcast. I smirked.
And, maybe, when I got Anna back I could have one of myself too.
Fun!
That evening, to keep myself occupied, I took another Denis
Wheatley book to read, this one being The Haunting of Toby Jugg,
another absurd but still gripping novel.
This time I was finding it harder to concentrate. I didn't know
about other people, but it was my feeling that sex was something
that, if repressed in one way, would find expression in another
way. Like a spring: if you tried to block it or cover it up, the
water pressure would just find another way out.
Maybe Freya felt the same way. I couldn't help thinking about
her freckles and nothing-under-the-dress. It must have been
about nine o'clock when, with beating heart, I rang the bell
summoning Freya to ask for some wine. She came in quickly,
wearing the nightdress affair she had worn for the fitting.
Smiling and bobbing she asked me what she could do for me.
'I'd like a drop of wine, please, Freya. Oh, and bring two
glasses.'
'Yes, Dominus. Of course.'
Did she wiggle her barely-covered bottom as she went out?
Back she came bearing a tray with a flask of wine and two
glasses. I motioned for her to sit at the table. She sat
opposite me. I poured out a glass for her and pushed it towards
her. Then I poured one for myself and held it up. The deep red
colour winked in the lamplight. Now there was only one subject
between her and me, and that had to remain unspoken.
'Here's to you, to me, to our household and to the Way of
Mithras.'
We both drank. I looked at her: her face was charming. She
shivered lightly. Goose pimples appeared on her arms. We drank
again. I looked at her arms and she gave me a look and shrugged
slightly as if to say “my arms betray my feelings; I can't do
anything about it”. Shrugging made her nipples apparent through
the thin material. I pushed my chair back a bit and gestured her
to come to me. She rose gracefully and slipped round the table,
caught my gaze and set her round bottom down in my lap. I ran my
fingers down her spine and she shivered once more. She nestled
her head against my neck, hiding her face. My fingers traced the
line of her spine again and she moaned, 'Dominus… Oh, Dominus…'
I raised my other hand to her breast and my thumb found her
crisp nipple. I said, 'Come upstairs.'
When I awoke the next morning, she was gone. What was left: a
copper hair or two, her smell, mine too, rumpled sheets. I
stretched out in bed and thought back. Her freckles did reach
down a bit but in fewer numbers. Her body had an exciting smell.
We had begun slowly and softly, then ended passionately, after
which we took a breather then started again for a longer bout. I
had released my sperm inside her; neither of us was in favour of
holding back. I felt extremely satisfied and full of tenderness
for her.
After a bit, she knocked and brought me a cup of coffee. She
briefly sat on the edge of the bed and gave me a quick kiss. She
smiled at me and said, 'All is well, Dominus. Breakfast is
ready; come down.' She got up, smiled again, then tripped out
with a spring in her step. Yesterday evening, had I done my
Mithraic act of kindness for the day? I hoped I had, at least it
seemed sensible. And I hoped I had not spoiled anything. Anyway,
had I frustrated her obvious willingness, she would only have
finished by turning sour on me and done something to spite me. I
didn't really have much choice. But was I lying to myself, or
not?
Finally, things went on much as they had before, except that
Freya joined me in my room in the evening. George seemed to be
in favour. Queenie didn't mind a bit. And so agent John's plan
to anchor me was accomplished, I supposed.
The next day, Aymar the tailor returned with some clothes to try
on. It was basically all Russian-style: long straight patterned
dresses for Freya, a working-man set for George with smock,
belt, trousers and boots and a landowner set for me with fur
hat, round-neck shirt, embroidered waistcoat, belt, trousers,
extra-smart boots and a dagger. We looked like a gang of
second-line stooges for a musical. But the other two were
absurdly proud. Freya had a pair of red boots to wear with the
dress and was all for getting Aymar to make the few alterations
on the spot and going out to the market immediately. As soon as
her stuff was ready she went off to get her basket, called
Queenie to heel, and regally set out to outshine all her rivals
in the street.
So, I suppose it was all a bit of a success. As for me, I found
the clothes very wearable and eventually got over the
embarrassment. But, I left the fur hat at home.
After lunch, agent John came over for us to visit the workshops.
In Deva, we mostly did software projects, design engineering and
such—all done by us technicians on computers. At Britiniacum it
was mostly light industry. Obviously there wasn't much heavy
engineering going on because of the transport problem. Another
difference between the two townships was that, in Britiniacum,
morale was far higher. The workers were good-natured and
optimistic, excited at the prospect of being paid in virtual
Sols.
Anyway, in Britiniacum they felt that they had got air transport
sorted out and were now considering means of heavy transport.
There was a general feeling that the first thing was to
establish a link between Britiniacum and Montafian's outfit in
central Paris. As I had walked along the track to get there,
they wanted to know all about it. Also, it seemed that the
Aérotrain hovertrain project had been developed in the region in
the nineteen sixties, and they planned to resurrect it. This
used an inverted T-section concrete guideway suitable for
installing on pylons, which would be easier to build, cheaper
and more secure than a rail-bed. I offered to make my AI
engineering skills available to them (at a very reasonable
rate), and we all got on very well, with plenty of use of first
names, toasts with spirits and general bonhomie. The other
possible solution was to get an old steam locomotive from the
Longueville Museum near the town of Provins, to the east of
Paris, and put it back to work on the existing railway lines
(which would require a lot of maintenance work). The firebox
could be converted to burn granulated charcoal in a fluidised
bed—at least that was the idea.
Frankly, it was a bit of a relief when it was all over and I was
walking back to the villa, a little worse for wear. I did find
agent John a little heavy going.
After a cup of tea in the warmth of my Russia-faking household,
I felt a lot better and turned my thoughts to setting up for
business at the villa. My new computer was due to arrive soon
with fuel-cells and auxiliaries.
I called for George and asked him if he could find out about
fitting out a room as an office. I assumed that he could get a
backhander and that would expedite things.
There was, of course, something always at the back of my mind:
getting my computer meant resurrecting Anna. But then how would
things be in my snug little household with Freya? I couldn't see
how to square that circle.
That evening Freya joined me again, and it was even closer,
deeper and stronger than before: deeply-satisfying plain
vanilla. I put off trying to finish reading that novel.
I really wanted a room of my own with my trusty computer in
pride of place. The next day, I had a good time instructing the
carpenter to set everything up in time for my computer to
arrive. In Britiniacum, things got done properly, on time. In
Deva, it would have taken weeks. The carpenter brought a mate
and got on with it. Later, I was able to sit in my half-finished
office in complacent self-satisfaction for a bit. But the
absence of a computer rather spoiled the effect, so I took out
my communicator and began dictating and editing a spiel for the
Mithras service I was supposed to be giving the next morning
(Sunday) at ten o'clock sharp.
Actually, I was quite glad to have this opportunity to test my
ability to play the priest. It seemed to me that religion was
not so much about faith but about ceremony—the way it was done
rather than what it was. Anyway, out of pure devilment, I was
keen to give it a go with pure, unadulterated, straight-faced
hypocrisy—careful to never go off-character.
This is what happened on Sunday: I had George ring the bell
outside the room with the household shrine five minutes before
ten. I put my Phrygian cap on and strode in at ten on the dot.
Freya and George were standing in quiet expectation. I lit the
candle before the gold-plated sun disk on the wall shrine and
began the speech that I had planned.
'Friends, we are gathered here to step outside our daily cares
for a while and consider who we are and why we do what we do.
For us, Sun God Mithras represents an ideal that we can approach
with due thought and care, and thus render our existence more
fruitful and clear, living our lives to the fullest, rendering
to others the kindness and support that we are entitled to
expect from them, knowing that every good action we do swells
the pool of happiness of our community. By the same token, those
who willingly cheat their fellows, in spite, jealousy, greed and
evil, must, sadly, be cast out from our community and wander the
outlands, outside the law. We live in an island set in a
stormy sea, which could be overwhelmed were it not for our
constant efforts to protect ourselves with force, arms and
strength of mind. Let our light not fail! Yes, stern is our duty
and strong must be our resolve. We are members of something
greater than ourselves for which we must be willing to make the
ultimate sacrifice in the hour of need, confident that our
sacrifice will not have been in vain but will forever be
remembered and cherished by those who have benefitted from it,
from that day forevermore. What is ours to give is not ours to
keep. So be not afraid, don't hold back but hold the line and
advance, even to the bitter end. We are the children of a proud
community that has held high the standard of fairness and
decency, even faced by a dark outside world of fear and
lawlessness where nothing can prosper.
'Yes the Sun is the emblem of Mithras, bringer of light, clarity
and understanding—bringer of truth. His very name comes from the
Persian word for “friend”, and so let him ever be the constant
friend to whom we need ever to be true if we are not to betray
our very being.
We know that the candle of our life will one day flicker and go
out. And so, we each wish to make our contribution that will
remain after us until the end of the world; thus we will have
played our part.
'Let us, therefore, now, all pledge our loyalty to the Way of
Mithras, our community of Britiniacum and to each other. We need
each other.
'I will begin invoking the spirit of Mithras by saying aloud
“Nama Mithras, may I be strong in your name”, then let each of
us do the same.'
Me: 'Nama Mithras, may I be strong in your name' (loud and
clear).
I turned to Freya. 'Sister…'
Freya: 'Nama Mithras, may I be strong in your name' (with a
grim, emotional smile and raised eyes of revelation).
I turned to George. 'Brother…'
George: 'Nama Mithras, may I be strong in your name' (with
inspired resolution).
Then we sang some songs about Mithras that they knew, and I had
a copy of: dee dum dee dum dee dee dee, tumpty tumpty tum tee
tee tee etc.
It ended. Brooding silence.
Then I said the standard formula: 'Go, this is the sending
forth,' and they trooped out with that coming-out-of-the-cinema
look.
I thought that it all went down rather well. I was already
thinking out a spiel for next Sunday: all about compassion.
You might say the basic message was “shape up or ship out”. And
you might say that objectively this was all bullshit; however,
subjectively, it seemed to resonate in all of us, bringing some
transcendent magic into each of our lives. I suppose we need the
eggs. God damn it: we were all feeling emotional by the time I
finished. A tear had rolled down the face of Freya; George and I
had been holding back. Sometimes I wondered if the cynicism I
professed was really just a protection against the vulnerability
I felt. We must have looked rather silly there in our Russian
Sunday clothes. Interestingly, they both had a word with me
individually later about whether their friends and relations
might come too next Sunday. Naturally, I magnanimously said, 'Of
course they can.'
That evening, when Freya joined me, there was an added
admiration that gave me a touch of the impostor syndrome, but
not enough to compromise anything—more the opposite really.
The next day, I contacted Edward again and told him I was ready
to collect the computer for Anna's brain bay. I was wondering
what would be the best way to bring it from Aigrefoin to
Britiniacum. I didn't really like the idea of braving the wild
wood again and was thinking more in terms of flying. Good old
Edward sent me a message right back to say that if I could
arrange it, he could get a plane at Toussus airfield and bring
it to me. Good news! I told him that he could stay the night at
Villa Aurelia with me and fly home the next day. We both knew
that it would have been a bad idea for me to go anywhere near
Deva in case Buonaventura found out. It would be a long walk for
Edward to get to and from Toussus airfield, and I really
appreciated his friendship. Actually, it seemed to me the he and
Anna were the only people that I could really trust.
Later, I walked over to the airfield with Queenie and arranged a
flight for Wednesday, when it seemed there would be a cargo
flight, and a return on Thursday.
It was all looking good until another message came from Edward;
he said he would like to invite his friend Pete to have dinner
with us if that would be okay. Well, I didn't feel much like it,
but I agreed. He asked me to arrange things. I kicked a few
stones along the track on the way back then got over it.
After lunch, I set out again and went to the town hall to find
out Pete's address.
At the reception desk, a helpful employee told me she could give
me his address but could I please identify myself first. That
was okay with me, but I was surprised to discover that it
entailed sitting in front of a camera for face recognition.
Bingo! My name came up straight away. I remembered that the same
thing happening when I first came to Britiniacum with Edward. I
got a warm smile and a '“Welcome to Britiniacum, Mr Walters.'
She handed me a small booklet outlining my privileges and duties
as member of the Britiniacum Community and made me sign for it
(presumably so that I couldn't plead ignorance in the event of
any infringements). Then she wrote Pete's address on a slip of
paper and said, 'Please read the little book, and you're welcome
to return any time for any other information you may need.' She
gave the Sun of Mithras open-hand sign. I returned it, turned
and left—clutching my booklet and the slip of paper.
Pete's place turned out to be a boarding house—clapboard, of
course. I knocked on the door. A lady shuffled up and creaked
the door open. I think I must have spoiled her nap. 'What is
it?' she croaked.
'Is Pete Wright in?'
'He's at work.'
'Can I leave a message?'
'Who are you?'
'James Walters, a friend of his.'
'I suppose so.'
I scribbled an invitation to dinner at Villa Aurelia on
Wednesday at seven on the back of the slip of paper.
'Give it here. But he won't be back till this evening.'
'Thank you very much.' Actually, drop dead.
Mission accomplished.
I strolled back to the villa with Queenie frisking about. She
definitely liked Britiniacum too. Everybody at the villa spoiled
her.
My communicator buzzed, it was a message to say that my computer
would be arriving by airfreight next Friday and that I could go
and pick it up after 2 pm. This really cheered me up.
When I got back, I sat down in my office to have a look at the
little book. This was a smart A5 size printed book with a faux
leather cover entitled “The Rights and Duties of the Citizen of
Britiniacum” in gold letters. I opened it up. Quality paper
(from God-knows-where), and about ten pages of admonitions. The
basic idea was that you had to pull your weight to hold the
baying barbarians out and ensure Britiniacum remained a safe and
happy place; keeping your nose clean would bring peace and
safety. Any major troublemakers would be cast out into the
wilderness forever or possibly just exiled for a while.
The most interesting bit was how the place was governed. There
was a public event on the last day of every month when twenty
citizens were chosen by lot. They replaced the twenty
longest-serving members of the sixty-person governing council of
the place for three months. And thus the governing council
membership was regularly rotated. Every week, ten members would
be chosen by lot from the council of sixty to form the “inner
council” and every day one of them would be chosen by lot to be
“king for a day”—the speaker. The council would have an armed
force of twenty at its disposition—the toughest fighters in the
city—the guards. Meanwhile the wardens (internal security) and
the rangers (external security) would report to the inner
council. Citizens could petition the governing council and
concessions could be granted by it to form companies for
performing specific tasks, but none were allowed to employ more
than ten people or lease more than ten hectares of land, neither
inside nor outside the city. This was to avoid centres of power
forming that could rival the council.
As far as duties and privileges were concerned, anyone chosen by
lot was required to turn up for business every day but Sunday
from ten to twelve and then attend a communal lunch at city
hall. Anyone not turning up would be fetched by the guards and
dragged there if necessary. However, there were considerable
privileges: councillors were granted immunity from debt (paid
from the public purse) and legal action against them was
amnestied (to prevent them being squeezed); they received a
monthly indemnity amounting twice the average wage for the
governing council (nice) and five times for the inner council
(very nice!). It was considered a big deal to be chosen, an
honour! Well I was now on the list too.
The whole system had been designed so as to ensure adequate
checks and balances and avoid any concentrations of power.
Actually, this complicated system seemed to work quite well.
Things were quite different where I came from, of course. In
Deva, there was set of technicians and experts who decided
everything under the cold eyes of the controllers and their
bullies, and the drones just had to do what they were told or be
expelled. No messing about with democracy there. One ruthless
controller could destroy the other controllers like maggots in a
bowl or the rex Nemorensis, “king of the sacred grove”,
the high-priest of Diana's temple at Nemi. There was always a
successor, so no problem. Hence agent John's interest in matters
at Deva and La Santé.
There was also one thing that the Britiniacum system was
carefully designed to avoid, and that was the development of a
two-party system of the type that developed in the “democratic”
countries before The Virus came. Looking back, it seemed to be a
sort of Punch-and-Judy show or, more accurately, a
Jack-Sprat-and-his-wife situation where any action by either,
when in power, would be automatically criticised by the other,
while the media—realising their power (and with their own
agendas)—gleefully egged them on from the side-lines to the
contempt of the surrounding “despotic” countries amazed at their
silliness and just waiting for them to fail. Here it was the
council's role to set policy and ensure that the hired managers
got things right.
Freya came in with the tea things on a tray, gratifying me with
one of her special smiles. This time, as it was one of the cold,
grey days that we so often got in spring, I had my tea in my
study. Having my own room was a wonderful thing. I was already
planning what I would do when I got my computer, my window into
the world. In a stout locked cabinet were my bug-out things:
clothes, pack, gear, boots, rifle, ammunition and all. I felt
safe, snug, in selfish isolation. A good time to think.
I was considering making a suggestion to the council about using
a blockchain system to collect taxes, now that there was a
stable (I hoped) currency system in operation. The idea had been
maturing in my mind since the Montafian project. Here was how
value added tax worked: when people bought something they got a
bill showing (say) 20% tax and they got a tax credit for the
amount. When they sold something they added 20% to their bill
and they got a tax liability for the amount. They declared the
difference between the two and paid or got paid for it. And so,
they had an incentive to issue a bill with tax when they sold,
because then they could get the tax back on it. Otherwise, they
would just have been paying the buyer's tax for them. “Join the
system and get tax back on everything you sell”: nice. And this
was just the sort of thing blockchain was suitable for: keeping
a record. In Deva, engaging in any sort of business required all
sorts of permissions, privileges and official approvals that
only the favoured few could obtain. In Britiniacum, we could
have a system that every citizen could join for their own
benefit and that of the community.
I asked Freya to make me a packed lunch for the next day as I
was planning to go round the entire township and have a look at
the wood processing yards, which I had not yet seen. I also
asked her to arrange for a dinner for three the following
evening.
Britiniacum stood on a plateau with river valleys looping round
it. I had decided to strike north until I reached the perimeter,
then circle round clockwise. Early next morning, with wet grass
and a rising sun, I went out with Queenie to walk right round
Britiniacum. There was a perimeter track between the gun
positions where the guards kept their watch and automatic
machine guns stood ready, and I went from one to the next,
clockwise. The wardens on duty gave me a grin and a wave as we
walked by: 'Hey, nice dog.'
I had forgotten about this while living in the town centre. Here
was a harsh and grim reality. As George Orwell was quoted as
saying (possibly apocryphally), “We sleep soundly in our beds
because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on
those who would do us harm”, and here they were. I thought about
the cost of all this, which led again to my tax ideas and
morale. If the economy couldn't hold together, all this would be
lost. And if all were allowed in, it would swamp the boat. It
all comes down to proper management and making hard decisions. I
was thinking first about my little household.
And you can see why the people were so keen on Mithraism and so
wary of Orphism. Mithraism represented duty (the hard approach)
and Orphism represented fun (the soft approach).
Soon the sun was high and the grass was dry. Hovering sky larks
were twittering about in the sky, and nature was generally
getting on with business. It warmed my heart. This was far from
the paved streets of Deva.
By the time I had got round to the southern end, I was already
getting hungry. The smell of tar grew stronger and soon I was
entering the wood-processing area where the logs of wood were
dried and cut to make fuel and construction timber. They used
horses and trailers for dragging the heavy logs around. They
used the old southern railway line to bring in the heavy logs
trimmed by the logging machines working away out south in the
woods. Too much noise and smell there to have my lunch so I went
on until I found a quiet spot further round. I got out my lunch
and began to munch with Queenie waiting expectantly.
While I was eating, I heard honking and shouting. A big flock of
geese came into sight led by a woman: blue gown, wide straw hat,
a stick and no shoes. I called over Queenie and told her to sit.
The woman got closer. When she saw me she stopped telling-off
the unimpressed geese, gave me a big smile and said, 'Would you
be James Walters of Aurelia Villa?'
'Why, yes. How do you know me?'
'Ah, I'm a friend of your Freya. And you will be eating one of
my best geese at your dinner party tomorrow evening.'
'Really? How did she manage to arrange that so quick?'
'She came early before I set out. And, by the way, Freya is a
wonderful girl and make sure you look after her properly. She
thinks the world of you.'
'I think she is wonderful too.' Not wanting to get pinned down,
I thought I would try to change the subject. 'How many geese
have you got?'
'About a hundred. They eat the grass, plenty at this time of
year.'
'Can't they fly away?'
'They might if your dog chased them. Actually they fly very
well. But they know me, and I know them. They follow me
everywhere. The only worry is if they flew over the perimeter,
then they would be lost. The Outsiders would get them. They'll
take anything they can catch.'
'The dog won't move. Right, Queenie?'
'Okay then. Nice to meet you. I'm Linda by the way. Please, tell
Freya that I'll bring the goose this evening.'
'Goodbye, Linda. Take care with these geese; I might need
another one sometime it they're good.'
'Of course they are. You'll see. And, don't forget, if I get you
some nice ones in the autumn, you can preserve the pieces in fat
and keep them all winter.'
'I'll speak to Freya about it.'
She summoned her geese and wandered off. Soon the last goose was
out of sight. She reminded me of that pig-farmer but nicer.
Queenie relaxed again.
Small place, Britiniacum. But safe.
In the end, I got back to the villa in time for tea. And later,
in bed, I had a discussion with Freya about the technicalities
of preserving pieces of goose in fat. It did seem a bit weird to
me at first, but she assured me it made good eating but the
thing was you needed to get a very fat goose containing more
than one kilogram of fat. She actually used the French term for
the stuff: confit d'oie. It was all very comfy and domestic. But
this was taking me further out into deep water as far as Anna
was concerned.
Wednesday morning came grey and cold. Edward would be coming
that afternoon to bring Anna's brain over. I began to start
worrying as I felt the wheels of intrigue starting to turn
again. It seemed that the interlude was over.
written by
Perseus Slade