ii had been known to bellow abuse at young students whose ideas of silence did not accord with his own. 'What do you think?' said Dee. 'Why the hell am I reading this? is what I think,' said Rye. 'OK, the writer's trying to be clever, using a single episode to hint at a whole epic to come, but it doesn't really work, does it? I mean, what's it about? Some kind of metaphor of life or what? And what the hell's that funny illustration all about? I hope you're not showing me this as the best thing you've come across. If so, I don't want to look at any of the other stuff in your possibles pile.' He shook his head, smiling. No smarl this. He had a rather nice smile. One of the rather nice things about it was that he used it alike to greet compliment or insult, triumph or disaster. A couple of days earlier for instance a lesser man might have napped when a badly plugged shelf had collapsed under the weight of the twenty-volume Oxford English Dictionary, scattering a party of civic dignitaries on a tour of the borough's newly refurbished Heritage, Arts and Library Centre. Only one of the visitors had been hit, receiving the full weight of Volume II on his toe. This was Coun cillor Cyril Steel, a virulent opponent of the Centre whose voice had frequently been raised in the council against 'wasting good public money on a load of airy nowt'. Percy Follows had run around like a panicked poodle, fearing a PR disaster, but Dee had merely smiled into the TV camera recording the event for BBC Mid-Yorks and said, 'Now even Councillor Steel will have to admit that a little learning can be a dangerous thing and not all our nowts are completely airy,' and continued with his explanatory address. Now he said, 'No, I'm not suggesting this as a contender for the prize, though it's not badly written. As for the drawing, it's part illustration and part illumination, I think. But what's really interesting is the way it chimes with something I read in today's Gazette.' He picked up a copy of the Mid-Yorkshire Gazette from the newspaper rack. The Gazette came out twice weekly, on Wednes days and Saturdays. This was the midweek edition. He opened it at the second page, set it before her and indicated a column with his thumb. AA MAN DIES IN TRAGIC ACCIDENT
The body of Mr Andrew Ainstable (34), a patrol officer with the Automobile Association, was found apparently drowned in a shallow stream running under the Little Bruton road on Tuesday morning. Thomas Killiwick (27) a local farmer who made the discovery theorized that Mr Ainstable, who it emerged was on his way to a Home Start call at Little Bruton, may have stopped for a call of nature, slipped, and banged his head, but the police are unable to confirm or to deny this theory at this juncture. Mr Ainstable is survived by his wife, Agnes, and a widowed mother. An inquest is expected to be called in the next few days.
'So what do you think?' asked Dee again. 'I think from the style of this report that they were probably wise at the Gazette to ask us to judge the literary merit of these stories,' said Rye. 'No. I mean this Dialogue thing. Bit of an odd coincidence, don't you think?' 'Not really. I mean, it's probably not a coincidence at all. Writers must often pick up ideas from what they read in the papers.' 'But this wasn't in the Gazette till this morning. And this came out of the bag of entries they sent round last night. So presumably they got it some time yesterday, the same day this poor chap died, and before the writer could have read about it.' 'OK, so it's a coincidence after all,' said Rye irritably. 'I've just read a story about a man who wins the lottery and has a heart attack. I dare say that this week somewhere there's been a man who won something in the lottery and had a heart attack. It didn't catch the attention of the Pulitzer Prize mob at the Gazette, but it's still a coincidence.' 'All the same,' said Dee, clearly reluctant to abandon his sense of oddness. 'Another thing, there's no pseudonym.' The rules of entry required that, in the interests of impartial judging, entrants used a pseudonym under their story tide. They also wrote these on a sealed envelope containing their real name and address. The envelopes were kept at the Gazette office.
13 'So he forgot,' said Rye. 'Not that it matters, anyway. It's not going to win, is it? So who cares who wrote it? Now, can I get on?' Dick Dee had no argument against this. But Rye noticed he didn't put the typescript either into the dump bin or on to his possibles pile, but set it aside. Shaking her head, Rye turned her attention to the next story on her pile. It was called 'Dreamtime', written in purple ink in a large spiky hand averaging four words to a line, and it began: When I woke up this morning I found I'd had a wet dream, and as I lay there trying to recall it, I found myself getting excited again . . . With a sigh, she skimmed it over into the dump bin and picked another. Chapter Three