Banjo didn’t know right from wrong. He’d always left that sort of thing to his brother.
‘Er … poor guy must’ve slipped,’ Medium Dave mumbled.
‘Oh, yeah … slipped,’ said Peachy.
He looked up, too.
It was funny. He hadn’t noticed them before. The white tower had seemed to glow from within. But now there were shadows, moving across the stone.
‘What was that?’ he said. ‘That sound …’
‘What sound?’
‘It sounded … like knives scraping,’ said Peachy. ‘Really close.’
‘There’s only us here!’ said Medium Dave. ‘What’re you afraid of? Attack by daisies? Come on … let’s go and help him …’
She
She heard the oh god gasp. But she was used to the idea of buildings that were bigger on the inside. Her grandfather had never been able to get a handle on dimensions.{80}
The second thing the eye was drawn to were the staircases. They started opposite one another in what was now a big round tower, its ceiling lost in the haze. The spirals circled into infinity.
Susan’s eyes went back to the first thing.
It was a large conical heap in the middle of the floor.
It was white. It glistened in the cool light that shone down from the mists.
‘It’s teeth,’ she said.
‘I think I’m going to throw up,’ said the oh god miserably.
‘There’s nothing that scary about teeth,’ said Susan. She didn’t mean it. The heap was very horrible indeed.
‘Did I say I was scared? I’m just hung over again … Oh,
Susan advanced on the heap, moving warily.
They were
Whoever had piled them up had presumably been the one who’d drawn the chalk marks around the obscene heap.
‘There’re so
‘At least twenty million, given the size of the average milk tooth,’ said Susan. She was shocked to find that it came almost automatically.
‘How can you possibly know that?’
‘Volume of a cone,’ said Susan. ‘Pi times the square of the radius times the height divided by three. I bet Miss Butts never thought it’d come in handy in a place like this.’
‘That’s amazing. You did it in your head?’
‘This isn’t right,’ said Susan quietly. ‘I don’t think this is what the Tooth Fairy is all about. All that effort to get the teeth, and then just to dump them like this? No. Anyway, there’s a cigarette end on the floor. I don’t see the Tooth Fairy as someone who rolls her own.’
She stared down at the chalk marks.
Voices high above her made her look up. She thought she saw a head look over the stair rail, and then draw back again. She didn’t see much of the face, but what she saw didn’t look fairylike.
She glanced back at the circle of chalk around the teeth. Someone had wanted all the teeth in one place and had drawn a circle to show people where they had to go.
There were a few symbols scrawled around the circle.
She had a good memory for small details. It was another family trait. And a small detail stirred in her memory like a sleepy bee.
‘Oh,
Someone shouted, someone up in the whiteness.
A body rolled down the stairs nearest her. It had been a skinny, middle-aged man. Technically it still was, but the long spiral staircase had not been kind.
It tumbled across the white marble and slid to a boneless halt.
Then, as she hurried towards the body, it faded away, leaving nothing behind but a smear of blood.
A jingle noise made her look back up the stairs. Spinning over and over, making salmon leaps in the air, a crowbar bounded over the last dozen steps and landed point first on a flagstone, staying upright and vibrating.
Chickenwire reached the top of the stairs, panting.
‘There’s people down there, Mister Teatime!’ he wheezed. ‘Dave and the others’ve gone down to catch them, Mister Teatime!’
‘Teh-ah-tim-eh,’ said Teatime, without taking his eyes off the wizard.
‘That’s right, sir!’
‘Well?’ said Teatime. ‘Just … do away with them.’
‘Er … one of them’s a girl, sir.’
Teatime still didn’t look round. He waved a hand vaguely.
‘Then do away with them
‘Yes, Mister … yes, right …’ Chickenwire coughed. ‘Don’t you want to find out why they’re here, sir?’
‘Good heavens, no. Why should I want to do that? Now go away.’
Chickenwire stood there for a moment, and then hurried off.
As he scurried down the stairs he thought he heard a creak, as of an ancient wooden door.
He went pale.
It was just a door, said the sensible bit in front of his brain. There were hundreds of them in this place, although, come to think of it, none of them had creaked.
The other bit, the bit that hung around in dark places nearly at the top of his spinal column, said: But it’s not one of them, and you know it, because you know which door it really is …