Monday 25 August 2014

Bank Holiday Monday Story...

Late in the day, but a story almost on time...

Based on an exercise set by Writers in the Rafters - combine two book titles and write on the subject of crime.  Both these books exist and I have one and used to own the other.

So Tarine Coutomaine is back in...

Birdy, the Penguin of Death


‘I don’t know…  An obscure cult with unlimited funds claiming their idol, a carved jade penguin reported to be thousands of years old, has been stolen and the world will come to an end if it isn’t found by Thursday?’ David said.  ‘Doesn’t sound very likely to me!’
‘And having the secret headquarters of a modern-day espionage agency in an apparent broom cupboard in a replica of Ceausescu’s palace now functioning as a DSS building isn’t?’  Tarine cupped the side of her face in a hand which ended in long, elegant fingers tipped by glittering titanium implant fingernails. ‘Do you want to go and tell Tremaine you think our assignment is improbable?  Or do you actually like working here?’
David muttered something, and Graham, the other operative in the room, grinned.
Tarine hid a sigh.  As trainees went’ they were no more than averagely hopeless… and after all, she had been a trainee herself, once.  She hadn’t ever been this wet behind the ears, though.
‘Rule number one.  Do not get side tracked by minutiae,’ she said.
Graham, as she’d expected, pounced on the remark.
‘We had rule number one yesterday, it was…’
‘…don’t get caught.  But this is Tuesday’s rules.  If we followed the proper sequence, by Friday we’ll be up to rule 378 and you’ll be so busy remembering the numbers you’ll forget the rules entirely,’ Tarine pointed out.
‘And… rule number one, epic fail!’ David pointed out. ‘Look who just got side tracked by minutiae!’
‘Yes,’ Tarine went on, taking control once more.  ‘It doesn’t matter if this is a holy relic, or a powerful new weapon disguised as a penguin statue, or just a valuable piece of jade, it has been stolen from an impregnable fortress and its fabulously wealthy and politically dangerous owners want it back.  So.  Theories, gentlemen?’
‘Inside job. Owner falls on hard times, fakes the theft, claims the insurance.’ Graham shrugged.  ‘Has to be.’
‘Point of note: The Jade Penguin of Death, a treasure beyond price, is not insured; it being priceless, and its religious significance means the owners didn’t even try; one does not insure one’s deity; it is considered bad manners.’
‘Still could be an inside job,’ Graham muttered.  ‘Either that or someone really has invited a matter transporter…’
‘Second point of note: Yes, they have.  But this wasn’t it, we know its whereabouts.  Any more ideas?’
‘What about… it isn’t stolen, it’s lost?’ David offered.
‘Not the most far-fetched of theories; it does sometimes get taken out of the vault for use in rituals. And there is the core of the problem; one of the cult’s festivals is coming up, and if the artefact isn’t found by then, and used in the ritual, then the followers believe the world will end in a massive ball of flame… or, if the penguin is in the wrong hands, and used for a different ritual, it will cause financial collapse and the gradual breaking down of the planetary climate systems.’ Tarine shrugged.  ‘It may be that finding out how it was stolen isn’t actually as important as finding the icon.’
‘Okay,’ David grinned.  ‘Let’s go and find Birdy.  Where do we start?’
*
It would take too long to follow all the steps taken, sources investigated and persons questioned in the search for Birdy, the Penguin of Death, and if Tarine were ever to suspect any of her interrogation techniques were in the public domain, she would believe it her duty to kill everyone who had discovered them... 
Suffice it to say that by Wednesday afternoon, her sources were beginning to feed back to her, Graham had gone on the sick with stress, and David had developed a nervous tic that made it look as if his face was dancing a salsa every time Tarine looked at him.
‘Are you sure you’re cut out for this line of work?’ Tarine asked.  David shook his head.
‘I was probably better off in Bomb Disposal…’
‘Never mind.  Drink up your nice chamomile tea and make sure you’ve got plenty of money in your pockets.  We’re going to pay a visit to Skinny the Dip.  It’s not far, and the fresh air will do you good.’
Skinny the Dip (named for his favourite coffee and his habit of picking pockets) held court in a tired greasy spoon cafĂ© in Leeds Market. He knew how to accept a bribe with grace and the money slid into his pocket almost invisibly.  At the same time he pushed a scrap of paper towards Tarine.
‘I have it on good authority the item you want is here,’ he said.  ‘But it’s due to be collected today.   Just hand this to the manager with the cash. You’ll have to hurry.’
‘Thank you, Skinny.’ Tarine got to her feet and made a point of counting her fingers.  ‘Nice to do an honest deal with you for once.’
‘What next?’ David asked.
‘Next, we want a number 5 bus from opposite the bus station… this way…’
A ten-minute bus ride deposited them in a run-down street made up mostly of charity shops interspersed with supermarket, butchers, betting shops.  A little way up the hill, Tarine stopped outside a latter-day pawnbroker’s.
‘This is it. So… in you go, give the nice man behind the counter this piece of paper… and some money… and I will be your back up, just in case.’
‘In case of what?’
‘In case the real contact comes back while you’re collecting the relic.’
It was the longest five minutes of David’s life, handing over the paper and waiting for the manager to go and fetch the jade statue from somewhere in the depths of the shop.  Tarine browsed and kept subtle watch until David was done, the Penguin of Death had been wrapped in tissue paper and put into a plastic bag, and then linked arms with him and whisked him out of the shop and around the corner.
‘What now?’
‘Now we walk very quickly along here, turn left at the end, and wait for a number 4 bus.
‘Why?’
‘Well, the 4 runs every ten minutes, the 5 every twenty.  And they won’t think to look for us here, they’ll be expecting us to run straight back for town down the main road. And give me that!’
She reached out and took the statuette, still wrapped in a plastic bag, out of his slack hands and squirrelled it away in her capacious handbag.
The bus arrived before David’s nerves gave way completely, and they took seats towards the back. 
‘And this bus stops almost outside HQ, of course,’ Tarine said, smoothing her skirts. ‘I do hope Tremaine is expecting us.’
‘Any problems, Tarine?’ Tremaine asked as he took relieved charge of the Penguin of Death.
‘Not so’s you’d notice.  They’re not always so simple, of course.  Any word on Graham?’
‘He’s starting to feel a bit better… next time, Tarine, warn the newbies before you use your patented interrogation techniques in front of them, yes?’
Tarine blinked wide, innocent eyes at her boss.
‘I was in a hurry for the information. So, you have the icon and I have the rest of the week off.’ 
‘Yes. David and I will take care of the handover, don’t worry.’
‘I’ll see you on Monday, then.’ She winked at David.  ‘That’s if the world doesn’t end in a big ball of flame tomorrow.’
*
When Tarine arrived at her office on Monday morning, she found an air of gloom about the place and a message telling her to go straight to Tremaine’s office.  David was waiting outside, too, and went in with her.
‘What’s all this about?’ she asked.  ‘Everyone seems rather subdued this morning?’
Tremaine sighed.
‘The owners of the icon wanted us to keep hold of it until the ceremony. We declined.  Apparently, on their way home, they were stopped and the icon taken again.  It’s been returned now, but not after it was used for the alternative dark rites… so while the world hasn’t ended in a ball of blistering flame, their prophets are now predicting all manner of disasters…’ Tremaine sighed again and shook his head.  ‘The polar ice caps will melt, great financial institutions will falter, the economy will fail… tornadoes and floods…’
Tarine gave a delicate little shrug and quirked an eyebrow.

‘Pretty much business as usual then?’ she said.

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