- Douglas Adams
- HHGTTG 4 - So Long, And Thanks For All the Fish
- So_Long_and_Thanks_for_All_the__split_027.html
Chapter 22
he night in Islington was sweet and
fragrant.
There were, of course, no Fuolornis
Fire Dragons about in the alley, but if any had chanced by they
might just as well have sloped off across the road for a pizza, for
they were not going to be needed.
Had an emergency cropped up while
they were still in the middle of their pizza with extra anchovies
they could always have sent across a message to put Dire Straits on
the stereo, which is now known to have much the same
effect.
“No,” said Fenchurch, “not
yet.”
Arthur put Dire Straits on the
stereo. Fenchurch pushed ajar the upstairs front door to let in a
little more of the sweet fragrant night air. They both sat on some
of the furniture made out of cushions very close to the open bottle
of champagne.
“No,” said Fenchurch, “not till
you’ve found out what’s wrong with me, which bit. But I suppose,”
she added, very, very, very quietly, “that we may as well start
with where your hand is now.”
Arthur said, “So which way do I
go?”
“Down,” said Fenchurch, “on this
occasion.”
He moved his hand.
“Down,” she said, “is in fact the
other way.”
“Oh yes.”
Mark Knopfler has an extraordinary
ability to make a Schecter Custom Stratocaster hoot and sing like
angels on a Saturday night, exhausted from being good all week and
needing a stiff drink—which is not strictly relevant at this point
since the record hadn’t yet got to that bit, but there will be too
much else going on when it does, and furthermore the chronicler
does not intend to sit here with a track list and a stopwatch, so
it seems best to mention it now while things are still moving
slowly.
“And so we come,” said Arthur, “to
your knee. There is something terribly and tragically wrong with
your left knee.”
“My left knee,” said Fenchurch, “is
absolutely fine.”
“So it is.”
“Did you know that…”
“What?”
“Ah, it’s all right, I can tell you
do. No, keep going.”
“So it has to be something to do with
your feet. …”
She smiled in the dim light, and
wriggled her shoulders noncommittally against the cushions. Since
there are cushions in the Universe, on Sqornshellous Beta to be
exact, two worlds in from the swampland of the mattresses, that
actively enjoy being wriggled against, particularly if it’s
noncommittally because of the syncopated way in which the shoulders
move, it’s a pity they weren’t there. They weren’t, but such is
life.
Arthur held her left foot in his lap
and looked it over carefully. All kinds of stuff about the way her
dress fell away from her legs was making it difficult for him to
think particularly clearly at this point.
“I have to admit,” he said, “that I
really don’t know what I’m looking for.”
“You’ll know when you find it,” she
said, “really you will.” There was a slight catch in her voice.
“It’s not that one.”
Feeling increasingly puzzled, Arthur
let her left foot down on the floor and moved himself around so
that he could take her right foot. She moved forward, put her arms
round him and kissed him, because the record had got to that bit
which, if you knew the record, you would know made it impossible
not to do this.
Then she gave him her right
foot.
He stroked it, ran his fingers around
her ankle, under her toes, along her instep, could find nothing
wrong with it.
She watched him with great amusement,
laughed and shook her head.
“No, don’t stop,” she said, “but it’s
not that one now.”
Arthur stopped, and frowned at her
left foot on the floor.
“Don’t stop.”
He stroked her right foot, ran his
fingers around her ankle, under her toes, along her instep, and
said, “You mean it’s something to do with which leg I’m holding
…?”
She did another of the shrugs which
would have brought such joy into the life of a simple cushion from
Sqornshellous Beta.
He frowned.
“Pick me up,” she said
quietly.
He let her right foot down on the
floor and stood up. So did she. He picked her up in his arms and
they kissed again. This went on for a while, then she said, “Now
put me down again.”
Still puzzled, he did
so.
“Well?”
She looked at him almost
challengingly.
“So what’s wrong with my feet?” she
said.
Arthur still did not understand. He
sat on the floor, then got down on his hands and knees to look at
her feet, in situ, as it were, in their normal habitat. And as he
looked closely, something odd struck him. He put his head right
down to the ground and peered. There was a long pause. He sat back
heavily.
“Yes,” he said, “I see what’s wrong
with your feet. They don’t touch the ground.”
“So … so what do you think
…?”
Arthur looked up at her quickly and
saw the deep apprehension making her eyes suddenly dark. She bit
her lip and was trembling.
“What do …” she stammered, “… are you
…?” She shook the hair forward over her eyes that were filling with
dark fearful tears.
He stood up quickly, put his arms
around her and gave her a single kiss.
“Perhaps you can do what I can do,”
he said, and walked straight out of her upstairs front
door.
The record got to the good
bit.