‘We meet,’ said the little man. ‘But people forget me, alas. It is because of my job.’ He took out his wallet, produced a card, passed it to me.
OBEDIAH POLKINGHORN
it read, and beneath that in small letters,
UNINVENTOR.
‘If you don’t mind my asking,’ I said. ‘What’s an uninventor?’
‘It’s somebody who uninvents things,’ he said. He raised his glass, which was quite empty. ‘Ah. Excuse me, Sally, I need another very large whisky.’
The rest of the crowd there that evening seemed to have decided that the man was both mad and uninteresting. They had returned to their conversations. I, on the other hand, was caught. ‘So,’ I said, resigning myself to my conversational fate. ‘Have you been an uninventor long?’
‘Since I was fairly young,’ he said. ‘I started uninventing when I was eighteen. Have you never wondered why we do not have jet-packs?’
I had, actually.
‘Saw a bit on
‘Ah, but we don’t,’ said Obediah Polkinghorn, ‘because I uninvented them about twenty years ago. I had to. They were driving everybody mad. I mean, they seemed so attractive, and so cheap, but you just had to have a few thousand bored teenagers strapping them on, zooming all over the place, hovering outside bedroom windows, crashing into the flying cars . . .’
‘Hold on,’ said Sally. ‘There aren’t any flying cars.’
‘True,’ said the little man, ‘but only because I uninvented them. You wouldn’t believe the traffic jams they’d cause. I’d look up and it was just the bottoms of bloody flying cars from horizon to horizon. Some days I couldn’t see the skies at all. People throwing rubbish out of their car windows . . . They were easy to run – ran off gravitosolar power, obviously – but I didn’t realise that they needed to go until I heard a lady talking about them on Radio Four, all “Why Oh Why Didn’t We Stick with Non-Flying Cars?” She had a point. Something needed to be done. I uninvented them. I made a list of inventions the world would be better off without and, one by one, I uninvented them all.’
By now he had started to gather a small audience. I was pleased I had a good seat.
‘It was a lot of work, too,’ he continued. ‘You see, it’s almost impossible
‘You also can’t expect us actually to believe any of this,’ said someone, and I think it was Jocelyn.
‘Right,’ said Brian. ‘I mean, next thing you’ll be telling us that you uninvented the spaceship.’
‘But I did,’ said Obediah Polkinghorn. He seemed extremely pleased with himself. ‘Twice. I had to. You see, the moment we whizz off into space and head out to the planets and beyond, we bump into things that spur so many other inventions. The Polaroid Instant Transporter. That was the worst. And the Mockett Telepathic Translator. That was the worst as well. But as long as it’s nothing worse than a rocket to the moon, I can keep everything under control.’
‘So, how exactly do you go about uninventing things?’ I asked.
‘It’s hard,’ he admitted. ‘It’s all about unpicking probability threads from the fabric of creation. Which is a bit like unpicking a needle from a haystack. But they tend to be long and tangled, like spaghetti. So it’s rather like having to unpick a strand of spaghetti from a haystack.’
‘Sounds like thirsty work,’ said Michael, and I signalled him to pour me another half pint of cider.
‘Fiddly,’ said the little man. ‘Yes. But I pride myself on doing good. Each day I wake, and, even if I’ve unhappened something that might have been wonderful, I think, Obediah Polkinghorn, the world is a happier place because of something that you’ve uninvented.’
He looked into his remaining scotch, swirled the liquid around in his glass.
‘The trouble is,’ he said, ‘with the Wispamuzak gone, that’s it. I’m done. It’s all been uninvented. There are no more horizons left to undiscover, no more mountains left to unclimb.’
‘Nuclear power?’ suggested ‘Tweet’ Peston.
‘Before my time,’ said Obediah. ‘Can’t uninvent things invented before I was born. Otherwise I might uninvent something that would have led to my birth, and then where would we be?’ Nobody had any suggestions. ‘Knee-high in jet-packs and flying cars, that’s where,’ he told us. ‘Not to mention Morrison’s Martian Emolument.’ For a moment, he looked quite grim. ‘Ooh. That stuff was nasty. And a cure for cancer. But frankly, given what it did to the oceans, I’d rather have the cancer.