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The Manual Of Detection Part 13

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Unwin lowered his umbrella over his face and searched for an escape route. Had the cabbie recognized him? He wondered if the newspapers had used the photo on his clerk's badge.

Moore was insistent, however. "Why did you stop when I waved for you if you did not plan to take on a fare?"

The driver mumbled inaudibly, then reached back, found the lock with his hand, and unfastened it. Moore threw the door open and slid across the seat. Unwin hesitated, but Moore beckoned for him to follow, so he closed up his umbrella and got in.

Moore gave an address just a few blocks from Unwin's own, then settled back into the seat. "Soon after I completed the Manual, Manual," he said, "it was decided that only a few specially trained agents would be privy to the secrets of Chapter Eighteen, and a shorter edition was quickly printed for general use. Enormous changes were under way at the Agency at this time: a new building, the construction of the archives. Controls had to be tightened. Every copy of the original edition was cataloged and accounted for. But what the overseer and I both knew was that one copy of the book could not be so easily repressed."

Moore tapped his own head and gave Unwin a meaningful look.



"But you would not have betrayed the Agency's trust."

"Of course not. I had been with the organization from the beginning, when fourteen of us shared one office heated by a coal stove. But the world had changed since then. The enemy had changed. Caligari's Traveling Carnival had arrived, and with it the nefarious biloquist Enoch Hoffmann. The old boundaries were already eroding, and to know a thing was to put it in jeopardy. The overseer had dictated to me his profoundest secrets, and he knew that Hoffmann, if he chose, could break the lock on my brain as easily as a child tears the wrapping from a birthday present. I was a danger to the Agency, loyal or not."

"The overseer threatened you?"

"He didn't have to."

"So you left. Made yourself forget everything."

"It was easier than you might think. I had been the Agency's first clerk. For years, I was its only clerk. I had developed memory exercises to retain all the information entrusted to me. Imaginary palaces, archives of the mind. They were structural; I could feel their weight in my head. The supports had been bending and groaning for a long time. I had only to loosen a brick or two, and let the rest collapse." Moore leaned forward and said to the driver, "You there, can't you go a bit faster?"

Unwin peered through the window. The streets were uncrowded, but despite Moore's insistence the driver maintained his pace, keeping always to one lane, never hurrying to beat a traffic signal.

Moore fell back into the seat, shaking his head. "I can't pretend to understand your role in all this, Mr. Unwin. But I think whoever has you on this case put you there because you know so little. How else to explain it? The enemy would not suspect your importance, even were he to search every corner of your mind."

"That's changing, though."

Moore nodded. "You know the dangers, but the dangers know you, too. We will have to act swiftly, now. Our investigation depends upon it."

"Investigation": it was just the word Unwin had been trying to avoid. How long now had he been doing the work of a detective, in spite of himself? Ever since he had stolen the phonograph record from Lamech's office. Or longer: since he first began to shadow the woman in the plaid coat.

"There's a doc.u.ment," Unwin said. "A phonograph record. I've played it, but I can't understand the recording-it's just a lot of garbled noises. I think Lamech intended to give it to me before he was killed."

Moore's face darkened. "It must have come from the Agency archives. That's where the overseer was experimenting with the new methodologies. You'll have to bring the record down there if you want to learn what it is."

Moore stopped talking and turned to rub condensation from the window with his sleeve. He gazed out at the street, frowning. Unwin saw the problem, too: their driver was headed the wrong way. Where was the man taking them? Perhaps a reward had been posted for Unwin's capture, and the cabbie meant to collect.

"I'm not paying you to take the scenic route," Moore said. "Left, man. Turn left!"

The driver turned right. On the next block, they saw a car that had swerved off the road and struck a fire hydrant. Water shot in torrents into the air, cascading over the vehicle, flooding the gutter and part of the street. A man in a suit sat on the crumpled hood of the car, scratching his head and trying to speak, but his mouth kept filling with water and he could only gurgle and spit. People walking by did not even look at him.

"This is outrageous," Moore said. "Has someone alerted the authorities? You," he said to the driver, "use your two-way radio, would you?"

The cabbie ignored him and drove slowly past the scene. Moore's face went red, and the bruise on his forehead grew a darker shade of purple. He seemed too angry to speak.

A police cruiser was parked at the next corner. Moore rolled down his window, and Unwin sank deeper into his seat as the old man shouted into the rain, "Officer! Officer!"

The driver's door was open. Seated behind the wheel with her feet on the dashboard was a girl of twelve or thirteen, dressed in her school uniform, twirling a billy club in her left hand. Imprisoned in the back of the car were seven or eight people, packed so tightly that one man-a policeman to judge from his hat, and maybe the rightful owner of the car-was stuck with his face pressed up against the gla.s.s.

Moore gasped. "The wicked truant!" he said to Unwin.

At the next block, the cabbie parked in front of a flower shop, where a few people stood beneath a blue-striped awning. He took the car out of gear and let the engine idle.

"I won't pay you a dime," Moore said. "Furthermore, I demand your registration number."

"Quiet," Unwin said to him.

Moore touched the lump on his head and looked at Unwin as though he had been struck.

"He's asleep," Unwin said. "They're all asleep. The whole city-everyone."

The people under the awning of the flower shop had noticed the taxicab. Moore peered through the window as they approached, then looked at Unwin. "You're right," he whispered.

A woman wearing a yellow housecoat opened the front pa.s.senger-side door. She leaned down and said to the driver, "Something to do."

The driver tapped his palm against the gear stick. "Someplace to be."

This was apparently the reply the woman was looking for, because she got in beside him and shut the door.

Unwin leaned close to Edwin Moore. "How could Hoffmann have done it?"

Moore was shaking his head and rubbing the white bristles on his chin. Quietly he said, "The alarm clocks."

Unwin thought again of the nighttime parade he had marched with, of that strange troupe with their thieves' sacks over their shoulders. Hoffmann had needed the help of only a few to steal the clocks. But then what? The entire city oversleeps and is susceptible to his influence?

"There is still something we're missing," Moore said. "But the clocks were implements of order, ones we've long taken for granted, and Hoffmann drowned them in the bay. These people outside, they may have dreamed of waking to phantom alarms, when in truth they were waking into a second sleep, one that Hoffmann had prepared for them. The city nearly fell to pieces on November twelfth. Now Hoffmann's cracked open the madness in its heart and spilled it into the streets."

"I don't see what he gains."

"Anything he wants," Moore said. "The dissolution of the Agency. The gold he thought was his on November twelfth, with interest. Who knows what he'll demand? We are beaten-and he has left us awake so that we may witness the manner of our defeat."

A sleepwalking boy in a green poncho opened the rear door and looked into the cab, his eyes dull behind drooping lids. Startled, Moore scooted across the seat, closer to Unwin. The boy climbed in and said to no one, "Have to get there soon."

Without turning, the driver of the taxi said, "Have to get it done."

Others were gathering around the vehicle now. They stood silent in the rain, swaying a little while they waited to take their places inside.

"There's more than plain madness here," Unwin said.

Moore pursed his lips. His eyes for a moment were those that Unwin had seen at the museum the morning before-blank in the dark caves of his eye sockets-and Unwin wondered how long the rebuilt frame of the man's mind would hold. But light quickly returned to them, and Moore said, "Yes, this group of sleepwalkers is different from those others. Special operatives of some kind, perhaps. It's as though they've been recruited for a particular task."

Unwin opened his door. "I don't think we want to be in this taxi," he said.

Moore shook his head. "One of us should stay with them, see what they're up to. And you already have a burden of your own. Get that record to the archives, Mr. Unwin. Let no one take it from you."

Unwin climbed out of the car. As soon as he was on his feet, a man in a red union suit slipped by and took his place. Now Moore was sandwiched between two sleepwalkers. For him there was no turning back.

Unwin reached in and handed him his umbrella. "You may need this."

Moore took it. "We have a good team here," he said.

Before Unwin could reply, the sleepwalker in the red union suit closed the door, and the taxicab rolled slowly away down the block. Moore turned in his seat to gaze out the rear window, one hand open in grim salute.

"And the truth is our business," Unwin said quietly.

IT WAS DARK As midnight now, though according to Unwin's watch it was barely eleven in the morning. The storm had worsened, and inky clouds blotted out every trace of the sun. He pulled his jacket tight over his chest as he walked, though it meant baring one hand to the cold.

Sleepwalkers, dozens of them on every block, ignored him as he pa.s.sed. Some, like the girl who had stolen the police car, were enacting their strange whims in the streets, transforming the city into a kind of open-air madhouse. One man had dragged his furniture onto the sidewalk and was seated on a soggy couch, tugging anxiously at his beard while listening to the news from a silent, unplugged radio. A woman nearby shouted up at an apartment building, arguing with no one Unwin could see or hear-there was a disagreement, it seemed, about who was to blame for ruining the pot roast.

Other sleepwalkers moved in small groups, stepping around Unwin as he pa.s.sed. They were silent, their eyes open but unfathomable. They were headed east, the same direction Moore had been taken.

By the time Unwin drew near to his apartment, his clothes were soaked through but his hands were clean. A black Agency car was parked at the end of the block. He cupped his hands against the gla.s.s to peer through, expecting to find Screed's scowling face, but the car was empty. He returned to his building and went inside, climbed the stairs to the fifth floor.

His apartment door was open, his spare key still in the lock. He put that in his pocket and went in, closing the door behind him. In the kitchen he found himself again at the barrel end of a gun-his own this time. Emily Doppel's eyes were half closed, but her aim seemed true enough. She carried her lunch box in her other hand.

Testing her, Unwin walked toward his bedroom. Emily followed, keeping the pistol trained on her target. He considered going into the bathroom to change, but Emily would probably have followed him there, too. So he undressed in front of her, leaving the damp and b.l.o.o.d.y clothes in a heap on the floor. Naked, he wondered if there were Agency bylaws regarding detectives and their a.s.sistants and whether this violated any of them.

Once he had put on dry clothes, he set the alarm clock he'd taken from the rowboat on his nightstand, then changed his mind and tucked it into his jacket. "I'm sure I was wrong about your lunch box," he said to Emily. "This might be my last chance to learn the truth."

After a moment she seemed to understand. She shook the pistol at him, directing him into the kitchen, then put the lunch box on the table and flipped it open.

Inside were dozens of tin figurines. Unwin set them on the table, lining them up like soldiers. They were not soldiers, though-they were detectives. One crouched with a magnifying gla.s.s in his hand, another spoke into a telephone, another held out his badge. One stood as Emily stood now, arm outstretched with pistol in hand. Another resembled Unwin in his current stance, bent over with his hands on his knees, an expression of mild astonishment on his face.

Only flecks of paint remained on the figurines; they had seen a lot of use through the years. Unwin imagined a little red-haired girl, alone at the playground, sitting cross-legged in the gra.s.s, surrounded by her dreamed-up operatives. What adventures they must have had under her authority! Now the game had become real for her.

"You understand that the memo I asked you to type was not a ruse," Unwin said. "You deserve better. You deserve a real detective."

Emily swept the figurines back into her lunch box. She kept the gun pointed at him and gestured toward his briefcase, which was lying on the floor near the door. He picked it up and she directed him out of the apartment and back down the stairs.

No one was on the street to witness the sleepwalker conduct him at gunpoint to the black car at the end of the block. He got in on the pa.s.senger side and set his briefcase between his feet.

"Are you sure you can drive?" Unwin asked.

For answer, Emily put the car into gear and turned out onto the street. She drove very carefully the seven blocks to the Agency office building, though no one else was on the road now. They parked right outside the lobby, and when Unwin got out of the car, he saw that lights were on in all forty-six floors.

TWELVE.

On Interrogation The process begins long before you are alone in a room together. By the time you ask the suspect your questions, you should already know the answers.

The fortieth floor, like the fourteenth, was a single enormous room, but it was empty except for a square metal table and two chairs at its center. Emily stood to one side, at the edge of the bright yellow light aimed at the table from above. She still held the gun but had left her lunch box in the car and taken Unwin's briefcase instead.

The man with the pointy blond beard was seated opposite Unwin. Of all the people who lived in the city, this man was one who Unwin wished were among the sleeping. But it seemed that Hoffmann had left the Agency's employees to go about their work unhindered-Emily's sleep was probably just a result of her condition. Whatever the magician was up to, he did not want anyone from the Agency's ranks involved. Or was it simply as Moore had said, that Hoffmann wanted them to see how he had triumphed?

If so, the man with the blond beard revealed no concern for what was happening outside. Without looking at Unwin, he set his portable typewriter on the table. He snapped his fingers at Emily, and she gave him the briefcase. He began removing its contents.

"Two pencils," he said, and put them side by side. "In need of sharpening."

Next he took out Unwin's copy of The Manual of Detection. The Manual of Detection. "Standard issue," he said, and sneered as he flipped it open to the t.i.tle page. "Fourth edition, utterly useless." "Standard issue," he said, and sneered as he flipped it open to the t.i.tle page. "Fourth edition, utterly useless."

Next were some file folders, all empty-Unwin liked to keep a few spares handy.

Last was the phonograph record. This he examined more carefully, holding it up to the light and gazing at its grooves, as though he could hear it if he looked closely enough. "A watcher-cla.s.s file, Sivart-related. Recorded by the late Mr. Lamech, pressed by Miss Palsgrave on Agency premises. Not logged in any official registry. Most suspect." He slipped it back into its cover and set it on the table, then turned the briefcase upside down and shook it. It was empty.

"I think the Agency has bigger worries than what I keep in my briefcase," Unwin said.

"Quiet," snapped the man with the blond beard. He put everything back, set the briefcase aside, and loaded a sheet of paper into his typewriter. "It took me hours to polish the keys after your accomplice spilled water on them." He sat very straight in his chair and closed his eyes, then rubbed his temples with the tips of his fingers. Next he stretched out his arms and flexed his hands. He seemed to be getting ready for some kind of performance.

"Maybe you should take notes about what's going on outside," Unwin said.

The man with the blond beard said to Emily, "If he speaks again, shoot him."

Unwin sighed and looked at the table while the man went through his stretching routine again. Then, with his eyes partly closed, he began to type. He worked quickly, just as he had done at the museum cafe. He seemed to be drawing words out of the air, typing them as he breathed them in.

He reached the bottom of the first page, set the sheet aside, and loaded another. Unwin looked at his watch to time the man's progress. He finished the second page in just under three minutes.

When the third page was done, the man with the blond beard stacked them together, folded them, and slid them into an envelope. He put the envelope inside his jacket, then closed the typewriter case and stood.

"That's it?" Unwin asked.

The man picked up Unwin's briefcase and went toward the door.

"Sir," Unwin said, getting to his feet, "I'd like my briefcase now."

"We have what we need," the man said to Emily. "And you have your orders."

Emily frowned in her sleep. It would not be easy for her to shoot him, Unwin thought. But she was angry. He had deceived her, disappointed her, made her believe he was something he was not. She must have drifted off to sleep sometime after she put him on the eight train that morning. Then she fell victim to the same plague that had infected the rest of the city, and her anger was shaken awake.

She pushed her gla.s.ses back on her nose and took aim. Did the Manual Manual include advice appropriate to situations like these? No, Unwin thought, it was not include advice appropriate to situations like these? No, Unwin thought, it was not The Manual of Detection The Manual of Detection he needed. It was his a.s.sistant's own good planning. he needed. It was his a.s.sistant's own good planning.

"Emily," he said. "The devil's in the details."

Her aim faltered a little.

He repeated the phrase, and Emily swayed on her feet as though the ground had shifted beneath her. "And doubly in the bubbly," she said, opening her eyes. She looked with alarm at the gun in her hand.

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The Manual Of Detection Part 13 summary

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