Stephen Walker

Mr Landen Has No Brain


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hiding.

      He studied it, nonplussed. ‘And what is this?’ He sniffed at it.

      ‘It’s a fedora.’

      He nibbled its edges.

      She said, ‘If you want to be a master of the night, you could wear that and a monocle, and perhaps carry a silvertipped cane. Let’s see how it fits.’ She stepped forward, yanked it from him, made sure the nibbled side faced the back and, stretching on tiptoes, attempted to place it on his head at just the right tilt.

      ‘Run, bunny, run!’ Mr Landen urged. ‘She’s trying to strangle you!’ And, half barging the startled rabbit over he pushed it toward the closet in the far wall.

      Teena watched them flee. ‘Mr Landen, you can’t strangle someone with a hat.’

      Half pushed, half running, Lepus said, ‘Quiver, female, quiver, for I am heading for a cupboard.’

      ‘Mr Landen?’ she asked still holding the hat.

      They ran into the closet.

      They slammed the door.

      And she heard them lock it from the inside.

      Then there was silence.

      She watched the closet door, baffled. If she hadn’t known Landen was Britain’s leading brain scientist – herself excluded – she’d think him a complete moron.

      Lepus’ door-muffled voice said, ‘Quiver, female, quiver, for now I am in a cupboard.’

      Some days weren’t worth climbing out of bed for.

       three

      Why did her head hurt like a squashed melon?

      Why could she smell cooking?

      … And why could she hear a knife being sharpened?

      Bleary eyed, Sally pulled her hair away from her face then checked her watch. Slowly, slowly it came into focus.

      Two hours?

      She’d been out cold for two hours?

      And where was she?

      She raised her head to look around. She recognized those white walls and that psychotic neatness, those gleaming utensils and polished cupboards. She was in the restaurant kitchen, lying face down on its table. Above the sizzle of simmering liquid a woman’s voice trilled,

      ‘Some day my prince will come.’

      Then Sally noticed; each of her own fingers wore the tiny chef’s hats that self-satisfied people put on chicken legs to make themselves look like real cooks. She looked down. Her shoes were gone and her toes had been decorated like petits fours.

      And her face …

      Her face had been basted?

      She looked up again and winced, the movement making her head hurt even more.

      Five feet away, in red PVC boots, a G-string and PVC corset, a woman stood over the cooker. Her back to Sally, she stirred the contents of a deep pot, her black hair hanging down to her waist. Finished stirring, she tapped the ladle three times on the pot’s rim then placed it beside the biggest meat cleaver Sally’d ever seen. She took a box of salt, broke it open and emptied it into the pot. Her velvet voice told Sally, ‘Don’t mind me, naughty girl. I’m just here to cook you.’

      That was what she thought.

      Before the woman could react, Sally was off the table and out the door.

       four

      ‘Uncle Al?’

      ‘Yes?’

      ‘It’s me; Sally.’ The moment she got back to her offices, before she’d even got her breath back, she was on the phone to him.

      And he’d better have a good explanation.

      He said, ‘Sally who?’

      ‘Sally Cooper. Who do you think?’

      ‘I may know numerous young ladies of that name.’

      ‘Like who?’

      ‘Sally Dunstable.’

      ‘And who’s Sally Dunstable?’ she asked.

      ‘It doesn’t matter who she is.’

      ‘Whoever she is you don’t know her. You don’t know any young ladies.’

      ‘I know Miss Go-La-Go-Go,’ he said.

      ‘Cthulha’s not famous, young nor a lady. And she works for you.’

      ‘So?’

      ‘So she doesn’t count.’

      ‘Then what about my beloved Catherine?’ he asked. ‘Does she work for me?’

      ‘No.’

      ‘And are you saying she’s not a lady?’

      ‘No.’

      ‘Good. Because if you were–’

      ‘She’s a Japanese sniper.’

      ‘I find your attitude wounding. And so would she if she were here.’

      ‘She is there. And she’d find nothing. Speaking of wounding–’

      ‘Yes?’

      ‘Your new restaurant.’

      ‘I have two; one in town and–’

      ‘The one facing this building.’ Now sat at her desk, she prised open the Venetian blinds and peered out at it. It stood there in all its purple gory, no sign of a madwoman coming after her.

      Her uncle said, ‘Young lady, only three factors matter in business; location, location and location. That restaurant fails on all three counts.’

      ‘Then why …?’

      ‘Mr Dunnett assures me its losses will lop substantial amounts off my next tax bill.’

      ‘Your cook’s just tried to eat me.’

      ‘Nonsense.’

      ‘She was about to stick me in the oven.’

      ‘Were you on her table?’

      ‘What’s that got to do with it?’

      ‘If it’s on her table she cooks it. She was most insistent on that at the interview. For five years she was a school dinner lady.’

      ‘So?’

      ‘So that’s how they do it in schools. With hundreds of mouths to feed there’s no time for fussing over ingredients. Each year numerous school boys disappear in such a manner.’

      Sally pressed the bump at the back of her head and winced at the pain it produced. ‘Uncle Al, she knocked me out to get me on that table.’

      ‘A woman of initiative.’

      ‘She wears S+M gear.’

      ‘That’s right.’

      ‘What kind of school was this?’

      He said, ‘I’m not at liberty to say but it produced half the British Cabinet.’

      ‘You don’t think you should sack her before she kills someone?’

      ‘I’m counting on her killing someone.’

      ‘What!?!’

      ‘Oh, no one important, just one of your more socially challenged guests; old Mr Johnson perhaps, the one with the