There was a moment of silence as they both pictured this meal. Fred Colon gave a
little sigh.
'Butter on the slumpie?'
'You wouldn't insult me by suggesting I'd leave it off, would you?'
'A man could linger a long time over a meal like that,' said Fred. 'The trouble
is, the Patrician, All, gets very short about carts parking on the street for
more than ten minutes. He reckons that's a sort of crime.'
'Taking ten minutes to eat one of my lunches isn't a crime, Fred, it's a
tragedy,' said All. 'It says here "City Watch - $15 removal", Fred. That's a
couple of days' profits, Fred.'
'Thing is,' said Fred Colon, 'it'll be paperwork, see? I can't just wave that
away. I only wish I could. There's all them counterfoils on the spike in my
office. If it was me running the Watch, of course . . . but my hands are tied,
see . . .'
The two men stood some way apart, hands in pockets, apparently paying little
attention to one another. Sergeant Colon began to whistle under his breath.
'I know a thing or two,' said All, carefully. 'People think waiters ain't got
ears.'
'I know lots of stuff, All,' said Colon, jingling his pocket change.
Both men stared at the sky for a while.
'I may have some honey ice cream left over from yesterday-'
Sergeant Colon looked down at the cart.
'Here, Mister Jolson,' he said, in a voice of absolute surprise. 'Some complete
bastard's put some sort of clamp on your wheel! Well, we'll soon see about
that.'
Colon pulled a couple of round, white-painted paddles from his belt, sighted on
the Watch House semaphore tower peeking over the top of the old lemonade
factory, waited until the watching gargoyle signalled him, and with a certain
amount of verve and flair ripped off an impression of a man with stiff arms
playing two games of table tennis at once.
'The team'll be along any minute - ah, watch this. . .'
A little further along the street two trolls were carefully clamping a hay
wagon. After a minute or two one of them happened to glance at the Watch House
tower, nudged his colleague, produced two bats of his own and, with rather less
elan than Sergeant Colon, sent a signal. When it was answered the trolls looked
around, spotted Colon and lumbered towards him.
'Ta-da!' said Colon proudly.
'Amazing, this new technology,' said All Jolson admiringly. 'And they must've
been, what, forty or fifty yards away?'
"s'right, All. In the old days I'd've had to blow a whistle. And they'll arrive
here knowin' it was me who wanted 'em, too.'
'Instead of having to look and see it was you,' said Jolson.
'Well, yeah,' said Colon, aware that what had transpired might not be the
brightest ray of light in the new dawn of the communications revolution. 'Of
course, it'd have worked just as well if they'd been streets away. On the other
side of the city, even. And if I told the gargoyle to, as we say, "put" it on
the "big" tower over on the Tump they'd have got it in Sto Lat within minutes,
see?'
'And that's twenty miles.'
'At least.'
'Amazing, Fred.'
'Time moves on, All,' said Colon, as the trolls reached them.
'Constable Chert, who told you to clamp my friend's cart?' he demanded.
'Well, sarge, dis morning you said we was to clamp every-'
'Not this cart,' said Colon. 'Unlock it right now, and we'll say no more about
it, eh?'