“Now I say, I’ve had enough! These shenanigans shall not continue, sir,
for by Jove I’ll…!” The man halted his
tirade and stared at me as if I were a trench-coated Chihuahua sitting on his sofa rather than
the suave freelance detective that I am.
I guess he wasn’t expecting me, but that’s okay – most people
don’t. What worried me was the revolver
that he waved with a tad less care than I would’ve liked. He was a prim-looking fellow with a figure reminiscent
of a tall Chianti wine bottle and dressed in a pinstriped tuxedo any penguin
would be proud to wear. I stood up,
politely removed my fedora, and offered him a friendly hand, ignoring the gun
that glared into my chest.
“Jesse Berlin, private eye,” I said,
with that professional smile used when meeting presidents, beautiful women, and
strange aristocrats holding me at gunpoint in their own foyer. “I knocked and the door swung open a bit by
itself, so I took advantage of its hospitality and made myself
comfortable. I hope you don’t mind. By your British accent, I take it you were
the fella that called me?”
His face lit up instantly. “Oh yes, of course, sir! Detective Jesse Berlin! My sincerest apologies for this barbaric
entrance, ‘tis no way for a guest to be welcomed. Please come this way.” He nervously stuffed the revolver under his
suit jacket, and led me back into the room he had just barged out from. “My name is Brighton,
sir, and I am the butler for this manor, just recently hired. I apologize for not providing any details
over the telephone, but I can never be sure when someone is listening in on
another line. There are so many in this
house.”
We continued walking down a carpeted
hallway past various pieces of Victorian furniture and a painting whose
individual value could easily have been more than half an Ivy League school’s
tuition. It depicted two figures cloaked
in black glaring fiercely at each other; a warrior with a bear-like body
crouched defensively and brandished a broad sword up at a man with black skin
and veins that glowed like fiber-optic wires.
Some surrealist fantasy work, I mused.
Weird. “Listening in? You mean you didn’t call on behalf of your
employer?”
“Oh dear no,” replied the
butler. “Master Noruma never involves
outsiders in his affairs. In fact, he
rarely involves insiders either! Keeps
himself company more often than not. But
in fact, he is the very reason I called you.
You see…”
“Noruma, is that an Asian name?”
“Oh I’m not sure I would say that,
though he’s certainly not from around here.”
“Is the master at home?”
“As always, unfortunately. But every night he spends hours in the North
Wing, where his study, personal library, and observation tower are. He won’t have heard you enter from there, a
fact I made certain of before calling you.”
A pair of mahogany double-doors stood before us, but their apparent
weight didn’t stop old Brighton from
gracefully swinging one open. “The common
library, Mr. Berlin. We shall speak in here.” He stepped aside to allow me to enter first,
which I did as humbly as I could manage, keeping my gray trench coat close
around me and ducking my head slightly in spite of the tall doors.
Gothic. That was my first impression, due to the
smooth stone pillars that marched down the long room like so many Marines at
attention. Marble I might have expected
in a mansion like this, but solemn gargoyles glared down at me from the base of
the vaulted ceiling as if daring me to voice my surprise. I sniffed at them and sauntered easily in, my
boots clomping loudly on the floor. It,
too, was stone. I guessed I wouldn’t
have to worry about some uptight sharp-nosed librarian drowning in her own
scarf telling me to be quiet in this place – you could hear a dust bunny
snore. The long hall was lined with
massive bookcases stuffed with all manner of leather-bound hardbacks in dusty
browns, blues, and maroons, and an ornately carved railing traced the exposed
upper floor around the shape of the room.
They just don’t make ‘em like
this anymore,
I smiled admiringly to myself.
A scraping noise resounded behind me
as the two doors closed shut.
I turned to my host. “Oh by the way, Brighton,
just before you barged into the entryway I heard some glass shatter loudly at
the other end of the house. Sounded like
it coulda been a window.”
“What’s this?” he replied, his eyes
blinking rapidly in concerned annoyance.
“Oh dear! Pardon me, Mr. Berlin, but I must see
to that immediately. Wait for me
here. And please don’t make a noise or
touch anything!” With the same graceful
action as before, he swiftly reopened one of the library doors, slipped
through, and shut it again. His
footsteps echoed erratically through the door as he ran down the hall. Then all was silent.
I glanced up at the gargoyles. “You don’t talk much, do you guys?” They glared back at me as if I were a huge
sack of talking meat. “No, I suppose
not. Probably wouldn’t want you to,
either.” Unconsciously my hands patted
the concealed Browning Hi-Power pistols under my trench coat.
Brrrrrrring! Zounds!
I nearly tripped on a coat rack and hemorrhaged at the sudden loudness
of the ringing. A dark round coffee
table stood by two elegant hunter-green chairs more stuffed than a Thanksgiving
turkey, and the insistent telephone sat right in its center. Brrrrrrring! Pulling my fedora down over my eyes, I gave
the insidious little implement of telecommunication my fiercest glare. Over the years, I had developed an intense
hatred of telephones, enhanced by their growing necessity in my line of
work. They always managed to ring just
as I was most in need of silence. The
fiends…
Brrrrrrring!
It appeared that I was the only
living soul in the room, and thus it was my responsibility to answer the
phone. Of course, it wasn’t my house,
and the British fellow had asked me not to touch anything, but after a few
years as a freelance detective you begin to ignore those kinds of warnings. Few things, it seems, happen by mere
chance. I picked up the receiver.
“House of Mr. Noruma, how may I help
you?” For some reason I felt rather
silly saying that, but it was all I could think of on the spot.
A husky female voice answered
anxiously, almost whispering, “You are in great danger. Follow the yellow brick road.”
At that moment something bright
caught my eye on the floor. Hopping
amiably past me towards the bookshelves was a fluffy long-eared rabbit with fur
the color of summer clouds. The little
fellow took no notice of me, but flopped merrily on his way.
“How ‘bout the white rabbit?” I
asked, eyebrows raised slightly.
Apparently Master Noruma kept no dogs, or that little ball of
fur-covered meat would be hopping a little faster.
There was a pause on the other
side. “Oh right, I’m sorry. Forget the yellow brick road. Follow the white rabbit.” The mysterious lady sounded vaguely embarrassed.
An odd thought struck my mind, not
hard enough to hurt but enough that I took notice. “Look ma’am, I don’t mean to pry, but it
doesn’t by any chance have large sharp fangs and like to bite people’s heads
off, does it?”
A pause. “This is not Monty Python, Mr. Berlin.”
I started in surprise. “Well pardon me, how do you know my
name? Who are you?”
Click.
For a moment I sympathized with telemarketers,
but that swiftly passed.
I hung up the phone, and looked over
at the rabbit, which had stopped by one of the bookcases and now inquired back
at me through glossy brown eyes filled with cuteness utterly devoid of
intelligence. My guide through an
eccentric’s mansion. Figures. After a quick glance around the library to
make sure no one else was present, I stuffed my hands in my pockets and strode
sulkily over. “Alright Pete, show me
what ya got,” I muttered.
The little fella’s cotton ball excuse
for a tail led me past a dozen or so towering oak bookcases, each one labeled
with a runic font inlaid with silver in a language I didn’t recognize. It certainly wasn’t Russian or German; those languages I knew. I made a mental note to ask Brighton
about it.
My furry leporid guide turned down
one particularly shadowed alley – hey, I’m a city man, alright? – where the
shelves were stacked with crumbling scrolls that reminded me of those delicious
pirouline cookies, the cigar-shaped ones of flaky vanilla wafers folded over a
thin cylinder of dark chocolate that melts rapturously in a morning cup of
cappuccino…
Pardon my distraction, but it’d been
a long night and I was in need of a sugar rush.
When I finally pulled my eyes away
from the distracting scrolls and looked at the end of the bookshelf alley, I
stopped my casual gait and stared incredulously at the sight before me. Not ten feet away was a full-sized red
British phone booth. Peter Rabbit hopped
gaily up to it and turned back to look at me; I swear the fella was
grinning. This entire situation was
getting a tad too bizarre for me, and I felt increasingly uneasy – a problem
which I countered by drawing my thick pistol.
The phone booth looked empty through its glass window, but I approached
it cautiously regardless and swung the door slowly open. It was empty but for the phone. I was confused.
“Ms. Peel? Mr. Steed?”
No Avengers here, apparently.
The silence was broken by the
violent staccato notes of a machine gun echoing from back in the North
Wing. I ran quickly to the end of the
bookcase alley, the wind from my gray coat ruffling a few scrolls, and peered
around the corner. Gunfire sputtered
again a few times, chased by the crashes, rips, and thuds of big things
breaking. A thoroughly irritating silence
followed.
The library doors were flung
violently open and Brighton dashed in as
though the Prime Minister was over for tea and he just realized that the scones
were on fire. Well, except for the revolver
in his hand, which he again seemed to forget as he saw me.
“You answered the bloody telephone,
didn’t you?!” he accused, running towards me.
“Blast! Well run while you’re at
it, Mr. Berlin,
run! Enter the phone booth, it’s the safest
way!”
I glanced back at the red booth,
where little Peter had somehow got onto the ledge below the phone and was now
actually dialing a number, the receiver dangling uselessly from its cord. “What’s going on, Brighton?! Who was firing a machine gun? And why the HECK is a RABBIT dialing a NUMBER
in a British PHONE BOOTH in the middle of a LIBRARY?!?!” I shouted.
The distraught butler reached me and
grabbed my arm, leading me back towards the phone booth. “I’m dreadfully sorry, sir, but there’s too
much to explain now. It’s my master, sir. He has a dreadful skeleton in his closet!”
Why do the Brits always have
to use crazy figures of speech? Sheesh. “Yeah, well we’d better find out what it is
quick, ‘cuz this place is starting to freak me out.” I stepped inside the phone booth, noting what
an uncomfortable fit this would be for us.
“But that IS what it is, sir!” cried
Brighton as he squeezed his narrow frame inside and shut the red grated
door. Peter Rabbit finished his dialing
and looked at me as if I were a 6’5” carrot.
“Pardon?”
The butler grabbed me by the
shoulders and shook me as much as he could in the cramped space. “Bones, sir, bones!!!” I felt like a pneumatic drill had just tap
danced on my head – apparently opening doors and serving tea builds excellent
upper body strength. My hands reached up
and gently removed his from their vice grip on my shoulders.
“Oh, a dead body! Why didn’t ya just say so in the first place,
so I’d at least know I’m dealing with a homicide. Golly!
Now please, WHAT IS GOING ON?”
Brighton took a deep breath before
continuing. “Master Noruma is a very
secretive man, and I know next to nothing about him, other than that he pays me
well to answer the door and not ask questions.
But queer winds have been blowing, strange noises heard from the North
Wing at night, and ill-seeming folk coming to meet with him for business that
can’t be good, sir. The skeleton was
what made me take action. Somehow he’s
found out though, I don’t know how! He
has a terrible temper. Someone shot at
me when I ran to investigate the breaking glass you mentioned and I immediately
ran back here. Things are moving in this
house, Mr. Berlin, and I warn you to be careful! Nothing is as it seems.”
Something outside caught my eye and
I looked up at the high vaulted ceiling.
“No kiddin’.” Brighton looked up
and groaned pitifully.
“Oh dear.”
It was a gray-skinned creature whose
thin bat-like wings supported a wiry muscular body and arms that ended in a
vicious set of claws. The head was like
a man’s but that fangs as long as pencils protruded from the mouth and the eyes
shone like the headlights of my black remodeled ’39 Ford in the mansion’s
driveway. A predatory light shone from
those eyes. Then I saw another creature
circling above, and another, and another and…and then I noticed that the stone
gargoyles were no longer perched cold by the ceiling.
“Don’t worry, Mr. Berlin,” said my
pinstriped penguin butler friend. “We’re
safe in the phone booth.”
I stared at him incredulously.
“Reinforced glass,” he whispered,
and winked.
The tiny red compartment lurched
suddenly upward, bobbing for a few moments in midair before rising steadily
above the bookshelves. It hovered for a
few seconds before floating over to the open area near the double-doors. Brighton smiled and scratched behind the ears
of the little white furball. “Jolly
good, rabbit!”
“Peter,” I said absentmindedly,
watching the circling gargoyles as we drew to eye level with them and gripping
my pistol firmly.
“What?”
“Peter. I…I named him Peter.” The butler’s eyes bored into me and I coughed
in minor embarrassment. “You know? As in Peter Rabbit, from…the…the Beatrix
Potter story.”
“Ah.
Yes.” There was an infuriating
amusement behind his eyes, no doubt mixed with worries that he had hired an
insane man to solve his mystery.
Fortunately, one of the gargoyles
saved me from my discomfiture by abruptly ramming the hovering phone
booth. The box lurched and a clawed gray
hand punched through the window, bursting glass shards on the three of us.
“Blasted rabbit!” shouted Brighton
as he cringed back into his corner. “You
didn’t activate the protection shield!
You dialed the wrong bloody number!”
Peter didn’t appear perturbed at his unfortunate error.
I shot the beastly thug as it tried
to hoist itself through the broken window.
It gave a broken cry somewhere between a snarl and a whimper before
dropping to the library floor like a sack of bricks. Another stony-faced (pardon the pun) gargoyle
flew up to the gaping hole and received another of my ready-made slugs in his
face, causing bits of rock and dust to fly.
Its arm was reaching in as I shot it, though, and now it wedged between
the glass and the phone box as its heavy body relaxed to hang. I felt the floor of the phone booth tilting
like the Fun House at a carnival and braced my hands on the red metal bars on
either side of me, shouting to Brighton to do the same. It didn’t work. Three other gargoyles saw what was happening
and grabbed onto the corpse of their comrade, and their weight caused the phone
booth to tip enough that I found myself staring at the smooth stonework some
ten feet below.
“Brighton!”
I yelled, feeling my hands slip. I heard
a gasp behind me and felt his thin body hit my back, and we both tumbled
down. Ten years of jumping out of Black
Hawk helicopters above steaming jungles and rugged mountains kicked in at seven
feet and I hit the ground rolling, trench coat whipping around my legs. In one motion I sat up, drew my second pistol
from my coat, and riddled the descending monsters with all the lead in the
clips. Three gargoyles thudded to the
ground, their chipped limbs and shattered wings clapping harshly on the stone
floor. I heard a groan behind me and
turned to see Brighton curled like an injured lamb on his side, grasping his
leg painfully.
“Don’t
think I can run, Mr. Berlin,” he mumbled.
“You won’t
have to!” I replied, desperately trying to reload my pistols. I glanced up as I did so, just as six more of
the brutes swooped roaring down.
Machine gun
fire resounded sharply from somewhere and slivers of broken rock scattered from
the air above as three of the attacking brutes fell from flight and the others
wheeled off screaming. A figure in raven
black Spec Ops gear leapt from the second floor balcony with a blazing Colt AR-15
assault rifle in his hands and landed heavily beside me. The uniform was skintight but for the Kevlar
vest and armor pads, as well as various holsters and ammo clips on his
belt. His black tailored leather
footwear looked like a cross between old-style riding and modern combat
boots. He looked down at me through
glinting yellow sunglasses and grinned a grin that I knew far too well.
“Ye still
shoot like an American, Jesse Berlin,” he said through a mild Scottish
brogue. “but no time fo’ chatter now,
Ah’m afraid! Start running!” The large double-doors began to open behind
us and a gloved hand pointed a handgun in.
The Spec Ops fella whirled on a dime and let a few rounds send the thug
scrambling back behind the door.
Apparently there were more thugs over there, for we heard other voices
shouting and guns cocking. Our newcomer
took off down to the far end of the library.
I returned
one of my pistols to its holster, swung the injured Brighton over my shoulder,
and followed at a dead run. Just as we
reached the end of the library and opened a back set of doors, the main
entrance doors swung open and a score of masked thugs dashed in with handguns
and rifles. I slammed the door shut
behind us and let Brighton sink gently to the ground. We were in a small storage room, nearly empty
but for a naked light bulb hanging from the ceiling by a wire and another door
in the back.
“You!”
winced Brighton, pointing at the black Spec Ops man. “You’re the one who shot at me!”
“Oh? Ah’m sorry, Ah didn’t know ye were a good
guy.”
The butler
stared at him with that horrified indignant expression so peculiar to the
British. “I’ll have you know you broke a
priceless stained glass window with your illegal
entrance, sir!”
“Bah!” said
the Scot, waving his hand. “That window
weren’t more ‘an 200 years old. Ye want
an antique an’ Ah kin show ye the suit o’ armor me family got as a gift from
ol’ Robert the Bruce in 1307, for the service the Brigant clans rendered him
while he was on th’ run from you bloody English!”
Leave it to
a Scot to worry about family ancestry.
Nevertheless, I caught my old friend in a brotherly hug, which he
returned with laughter. “Well I’ll be! Hello Double-O.”
Instantly
he drew back and glared at me. “What’s
this now? Not again!”
“Oh come
now, James, don’t be modest,” I laughed, winking at the butler.
Brighton’s
eyes grew wide, and he gazed at the man as if he’d just asked for a martini
shaken, not stirred. “Double-O? You…you…you’re the…James? Bond?”
“Blast it,
Berlin, ye’ve gone an’ done it again!” the Scot cried at me. He turned to Brighton. “Ah’m sorry to destroy your dreams, sir, but
Ah am NOT 007. Mah name is James
Brigant, captain of the elite – well, ye’ve no need to know their name –, an’
though mah dashing American friend here seems to have forgotten, Ah hail from
Scotland, not soggy ol’ England.”
“Soggy?!?!”
cried Brighton in severe indignation.
“Well I say, that’s nice coming from a people who chase sheep around the
moors in plaid skirts while screaming like savages!”
“KILTS!”
roared the Scot. “Dinnae slander th’
clans, ye lit’l English teabag!”
“And
remember,” I cautioned the butler. “The
Scots do have haggis.”
“O Lord,
please!” James Brigant rolled his eyes
towards heaven.
“And
again,” I said, putting my arm protectively about the butler, “let’s not forget
that Sean Connery, God save him, is Scottish.
Which reminds me, Brigant, you’ve also got the same initials as Mr.
Bond.”
Brigant
stood his assault rifle on its barrel and stared at me. “So do you, Jesse Berlin.”
I
paused. “Oh right, I guess it’s not so
big a coincidence then, is it, Jim?”
“James,” he
growled.
“Aha!” I
cried in victory, and winked at Brighton.
“I knew I’d get him sooner or later, he hates that nickname.”
For a few
eternal seconds after that remark you could’ve died of compression due to the
pressure in the air.
A
smattering of bullets burst loudly through the door without warning, just missing
my hat as I dove to the ground with Brigant.
“Oh by the way,” I said. “Thanks
for saving my life again. You can tell
me why you’re here later.”
“Ah’m here
‘cuz you’re bloody here, that’s why,” he replied with his old smile. That answer satisfied me. Then he suddenly cursed and held up his
rifle, the magazine bent in where the bullets had hit. “Curses, that was darn good weapon, too! Bloody useless now though.” He tossed it away.
Brighton
gasped suddenly in pain, and I helped him awkwardly to his feet. “That back door, it opens to a corridor that
leads to a storage room in the rear that has a door to the outside. It’s our best hope for escape.”
I hoisted
the wounded man back over my shoulder and nodded to Brigant.
As we ran
down the narrow corridor, I thought I heard a strange voice chanting something
back in the library. A moment later
there was an ear-shattering explosion as a wave of vicious flames and smoke
billowed out of the door behind us, followed by splinters of wood.
“What in
th’ name o’ William Wallace was that?!”
yelled Brigant.
“Oh dear oh
dear oh dear,” muttered Brighton nervously.
“Master Noruma is angry with me.”
Brigant
glanced at me quizzically as he ran.
“Isn’t it illegal to have high-powered explosives in a private residence
around ‘ere?”
“That
wasn’t an explosive, my great Scot,” answered Brighton, turning his head awkwardly
so he could see the man over my shoulder.
“Nor was it a rocket or napalm from a flame-thrower. It was Master Noruma.”
We reached
the door at the end of the corridor, and Brigant put his ear to the wood, listening
with all the skills he’d learned from masters all over the world, from Russian
spies and Japanese ninjas to the Spanish gypsies and Native American
braves. Then he slowly turned the handle
and inched the door open, just a crack.
“Thair are
more thugs inside,” he whispered. “They’re
quiet, waiting, but they don’t know we’re here yet. They aren’t watching this door.”
Gently I
set Brighton down. “So, how about I take the boring job of
caring for our wounded comrade while you can do the honor of clearing our path
with those floozies of yours.”
“Uzis,”
replied Brigant, drawing the two Israeli-manufactured rapid-fire handguns from
his belt.
“Yeah.”
The Scot
thought for a moment. “I’ll tell ye
what, Berlin. You burst inta that room guns blazing like
Steve McQueen meets The Matrix an’
I’ll stay in the hall to cover yer back.”
I
grinned. “Aww, you’d do that for me?”
He grinned
right back. “In a minute.”
“Well
then,” I said, “it’s only fair for me to accept such a generous proposal.” I shrugged easily and checked to make sure my
pistols had all the cartridges loaded that they could hold. When satisfied, I looked up and smiled,
stepping lightly towards the door.
“Wait just
a minute!” cried Brighton. “What about
me? As soon as the smoke and flames
clear from that back room, Noruma and his cronies will be in here and I’ll be
as good as dead before you get back!”
“Ach, I kin
hold off a score o’ men with my Uzis,” said Brigant.
Just then
the sound of footsteps and shouting was heard down the corridor in the room by
the library. Among the shadows to be
seen in the light that streamed from the hole where the door had been was a
tall muscled figure with a cape billowing out.
“But not
Master Noruma,” replied Brighton.
“Well that
settles it! We’ve got one go, let’s make
it good.” I said, grabbing the butler and hoisting him over my shoulder. I nodded to Brigant and adjusted my gray fedora
with my free hand. He nodded back,
brandishing his Uzis as I pointed to the door with my Browning Hi-Power pistol.
“Tally ho.”