Chapter 8 - The Quest
Jemima soon found
herself at home at Aigrefoin Farm—helping Madame in the
house, sweet-talking Monsieur, flirting with their son Hugo
and friendly to me: an asset. There was just one area where
she flatly refused to cooperate: she wouldn’t have anything
to do with pigs; “a total overdose” was the way she put it.
But the only pigs there were wild ones shot by Monsieur, so
this didn’t cause any awkwardness.
Since The Virus, all the land around was
reverting to its climax vegetation of dense forest, like
what had happened around Chernobyl nearly a century ago,
according to Monsieur. He told me that, in Roman times, the
forest was unbroken east of the River Rhine, running deep
and broad from Switzerland to the North Sea and forming the
border between Gaul to the west and Germany to the east. The
southern border of the forest was the mighty River Danube,
rising in Germany just north of Switzerland and running
eastward and slightly southward to join the Black Sea some
three thousand kilometres away. The Romans had sent patrols
and found that the forest could be traversed on foot from
south to north in nine days, but patrols sent from west to
east could find no end of it after sixty days and turned
back. They called it the Hercynian Forest (Hercynia Silva) and left it alone after a bitter defeat there in AD
9 when an alliance of Germanic tribes ambushed and
decisively destroyed three Roman legions and their
auxiliaries. The Vikings living in Scandinavia across the
Baltic Sea north of Germany called it Mirkwood (Myrkviðr), barring their route to the south. Now Mirkwood was
growing thick again, with just a few patches of civilisation
like Deva and Britiniacum and others dotted about.
Mirkwood was now teeming with all kinds of
deer, wild pigs, wild cattle, elk and bison; there were
clear signs of the presence of wolves and bears and even
talk of big cats. It wasn’t a place for the unwary to
wander. Every autumn, the forest floor was littered with
acorns and chestnuts, and mushrooms growing everywhere to
the delight of the wild pigs. Madame especially appreciated
the cèpes and was waiting
for them to come back into season. Meanwhile, the cellar was
filled with dried ones. There was a richness and fullness of
life here and a hint of danger, so unlike Deva.
A few days later, after coming back from a
hike early in the afternoon, we found a different pair of
muddy boots at the door and Meg in the sitting room with a
mug of beer. This time she wasn’t wearing her onesie but a
black-and-yellow check fluffy woollen coat and thick red
tights with a hole in the left heel. She gave me a friendly
smile, and I was glad to see her.
‘Come and have a beer, James.’
‘Sure.’
‘You’ve been here for a week now. Edward says
you’re shaping up well. It’s time to talk.’
A
nd so, on that spring day, began a
conversation that I would long remember: the sunlight
streaming through the windows, the flickering fire in the
great fireplace, the quietness, the wholesome taste of the
cloudy home made beer.
‘We have a common problem, James,’ she said in
a weary voice. ‘It’s Buonaventura.’ She gave me a hard
stare, took a swig of beer and sharply added, ‘We need to
stop him. Now.’ She paused for a moment and continued, ‘You
don’t have the money to get a new body for Anna, right?’
I nodded.
‘We have a plan to get you the money you
need.’
I nodded again.
‘Then listen carefully. There is a crazy old
man named Jean Montafian, who lives in the ruins of Paris.
He has been carefully collecting all the gold that he can
find there, in the old banks and such, but there is not much
that he can do with it. He needs to monetise it and replace
dodgy Cryptocoins with a stable gold-backed currency. He
does not know how to do it and he is willing to pay you to
help him.. I take it, James, that you know all about
Cryptocoins and escrow systems of payment?’
‘Yeah.’ Well I could find out.
‘So get on over to Paris, find Montafian and
sort things out.’
She took another swig of beer, wiped her mouth
with the back of her hand, and added, ‘You go in the next
few days and the brain stays here. When you get back, settle
Buonaventura’s account, then come and get the brain back.
Okay?’
I tried to take in all the information.
‘Edward can fill you in with all the details.’
Meg certainly knew how to be direct. I said,
‘Yeah,’ again, and as we seemed to have run out of
conversation, we both stared glumly into the fire.
After a while, I asked, ‘How should I settle
Mr B’s account then?’
‘Permanently,’ she replied.
She heaved herself up, knocked her pipe out on
the end of a log burning in the hearth, came back and
slumped in her chair again. Then she started telling me
about the evil things Mr. B had been doing that, I
supposed, amply justified his removal. While she was going
into a detailed account of his selective breeding attempts,
trying to produce pretty-boy drones by artificial
insemination of the females with genetic material from
south-east Asia, I stopped listening and began musing about
how to deal with the bastard.
A while later, her chair scraped, and I came
back to reality with a jolt. She was saying ‘…and don’t
forget, Edward has all the details.’
So it was all saying goodbye and good luck,
and her fumbling with getting her boots on, her red tights
in artless display. Finally the door was closed and I heaved
a sigh of relief.
Meg seemed to be assuming that I hated
Buonaventura and wanted Anna back so much that I was ready
to get rid of him permanently. But what did that mean? It
had to mean killing him because otherwise, with his contacts
and general clever nastiness, he would certainly try to get
his own back if I just challenged him.
Then I thought of Anna again and began to
bristle with anger. Maybe I was ready and willing to
eliminate him, but I decided I would cross that bridge when
I came to it, and for now I would concentrate on the
Montafian job.
I finished my beer, put the mug down on the
table and went off to find Edward and tell him I was ready.