"London.Bone" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moorcock Michael)
London Bone - a novelette by Michael Moorcock
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London Bone
a novelette
by
Michael Moorcock
For Ronnie Scott
ONE
My name is Raymond Gold and I'm a well-known dealer. I was born
too many years ago in Upper Street, Islington. Everybody reckons
me in the London markets and I have a good reputation in Manchester
and the provinces. I have bought and sold, been the middleman,
an agent, an art representative, a professional mentor, a tour
guide, a spiritual bridge-builder. These days I call myself a
cultural speculator.
But, you won't like it, the more familiar word for my profession,
as I practised it until recently, is scalper. This kind
of language is just another way of isolating the small businessman
and making what he does seem sleazy while the stockbroker dealing
in millions is supposed to be legitimate. But I don't need to
convince anyone today that there's no sodding justice.
'Scalping' is risky. What you do is invest in tickets on spec
and hope to make a timely sale when the market for them hits zenith.
Any kind of ticket, really, but mostly shows. I've never seen
anything offensive about getting the maximum possible profit out
of an American matron with more money than sense who's anxious
to report home with the right items ticked off the beento
list. We've all seen them rushing about in their overpriced limos
and mini-buses, pretending to be individuals: Thursday:
Changing-of-the-Guard, Harrods, Planet Hollywood, Royal Academy,
Tea-At-the-Ritz, Cats. It's a sort of tribal dance
they all feel compelled to perform. If they don't perform it,
they feel inadequate. Saturday:
Tower of London, Bucket of Blood, Jack-the-Ripper talk, Sherlock
Holmes Pub, Sherlock Holmes tour, Madame Tussaud's, Covent Garden
Cream Tea, Dogs. These are people so traumatized by
contact with strangers that their only security lies in these
rituals, these well-blazed trails and familiar chants. It's my
job to smooth their paths, to make them exclaim how pretty and
wonderful and elegant and magical it all is. The street
people aren't a problem. They're just so many charming Dick Van
Dykes.
Americans need bullshit the way koala bears need eucalyptus leaves.
They've become totally addicted to it. They get so much of it
back home that they can't survive without it. It's your duty to
help them get their regular fixes while they travel. And when
they make it back after three weeks on alien shores, their friends,
of course, are always glad of some foreign bullshit for a change.
Even if you sell a show ticket to a real enthusiast, who has already
been forty nine times and is so familiar to the cast they see
him in the street and think he's a relative, who are you hurting?
Andros Loud Website, Lady Hatchet's loyal laureate, who achieved
rank and wealth by celebrating the lighter side of the moral vacuum?
He would surely applaud my enterprise in the buccaneering spirit
of the free market. Venture capitalism at its bravest. Well, he'd
applaud me if he had time these days from his railings against
fate, his horrible understanding of the true nature of his coming
obscurity. But that's partly what my story's about.
I have to say in my own favour that I'm not merely a speculator
or, if you like, exploiter. I'm also a patron. For many years,
not just recently, a niagara of dosh has flowed out of my pocket
and into the real arts faster than a cat up a Frenchman. Whole
orchestras and famous soloists have been brought to the Wigmore
Hall on the money they get from me. But I couldn't have afforded
this if it wasn't for the definitely iffy Miss Saigon (a
triumph of well-oiled machinery over dodgy morality) or the unbelievably
decrepit Good Rockin' Tonite (in which the living dead
jive in the aisles), nor, of course, that first great theatrical
triumph of the new millennium, Schindler: The Musical.
Make 'em weep, Uncle Walt!
So who is helping most to support the arts? You, me, the lottery?
I had another reputation, of course, which some saw as a second
profession. I was one of the last great London characters. I was
always on late-night telly lit from below and Iain Sinclair couldn't
write a paragraph without dropping my name at least once. I'm
a quintessential Londoner, I am. I'm a Cockney gentleman.
I read Israel Zangwill and Gerald Kersh and Alexander Barron.
I can tell you the best books of Pett Ridge and Arthur Morrison.
I know Pratface Charlie, Driff and Martin Stone, Bernie Michaud
and the even more legendary Gerry and Pat Goldstein. They're all
historians, archeologists, revenants. There isn't another culture-dealer
in London, oldster or child, who doesn't at some time come to
me for an opinion. Even now, when I'm as popular as a pig at a
Putney wedding and people hold their noses and dive into traffic
rather than have to say hello to me, they still need me for that.
I've known all the famous Londoners or known someone else who
did. I can tell stories of long-dead gangsters who made the Krays
seem like Amnesty International. Bare-knuckle boxing. Fighting
the fascists in the East End. Gun-battles with the police all
over Stepney in the 1900s. The terrifying girl gangsters of Whitechapel.
Barricading the Old Bill in his own barracks down in Notting Dale.
I can tell you where all the music halls were and what was sung
in them. And why. I can tell Marie Lloyd stories and Max Miller
stories that are fresh and sharp and bawdy as the day they happened,
because their wit and experience came out of the market streets
of London. The same streets. The same markets. The same family
names. London is markets. Markets are London.
I'm a Londoner through and through. I know Mr Gog personally.
I know Ma Gog even more personally. During the day I can walk
anywhere from Bow to Bayswater faster than any taxi. I love the
markets. Brick Lane. Church Street. Portobello. You won't find
me on a bike with my bum in the air on a winter's afternoon. I
walk or drive. Nothing in between. I wear a camel-hair in winter
and a Barraclough's in summer. You know what would happen
to a coat like that on a bike.
I love the theatre. I like modern dance, very good movies and
ambitious international contemporary music. I like poetry, prose,
painting and the decorative arts. I like the lot, the very best
that London's got, the whole bloody casserole. I gobble it all
up and bang on my bowl for more. Let timid greenbelters creep
in at weekends and sink themselves in the West End's familiar
deodorised shit if they want to. That's not my city. That's a
tourist set. It's what I live off. What all of us show-people
live off. It's the old, familiar circus. The big rotate.
We're selling what everybody recognises. What makes them feel
safe and certain and sure of every single moment in the city.
Nothing to worry about in jolly old London. We sell charm and
colour by the yard. Whole word factories turn out new rhyming
slang and saucy street characters are trained on council grants.
Don't frighten the horses. Licensed pearlies pause for a photo-opportunity
in the dockside Secure Zones. Without all that cheap scenery,
without our myths and magical skills, without our whorish good
cheer and instincts for trade -- any kind of trade -- we probably
wouldn't have a living city.
As it is, the real city I live in has per square inch more creative
energy at work at any given moment than anywhere else on the planet.
But you'd never know it from a stroll up the Strand. It's almost
all in those lively little sidestreets the English-speaking tourists
can't help feeling a bit nervous about and which the French adore.
If you use music for comfortable escape you'd probably find more
satisfying and cheaper relief in a massage parlour than at the
umpteenth revival of The Sound of Music. I'd tell that
to any hesitant punter who's not too sure. Check out the phone
boxes for the ladies, I'd say, or you can go to the half-price
ticket-booth in Leicester Square and pick up a ticket that'll
deliver real value -- Ibsen or Shakespeare, Shaw or Greenbank.
Certainly you can fork out three hundred sheets for a fifty sheet
ticket that in a justly-ordered world wouldn't be worth two pee
and have your ears salved and your cradle rocked for two hours.
Don't worry, I'd tell them, I make no judgements. Some hard-working
whore profits, whatever you decide. So who's the cynic?
I went on one of those tours when my friends Dave and Di from
Bury came up for the Festival of London in 200l and it's
amazing the crap they tell people. They put sex, violence and
money into every story. They know fuck-all. They soup everything
up. It's Sun-reader history. Even the Beefeaters at the
Tower. Poppinsland. All that old English duff.
It makes you glad to get back to Soho.
Not so long ago you would usually find me in the Princess Louise,
Berwick Street, at lunch time, a few doors down from the Chinese
chippy and just across from Mrs White's trim stall in Berwick
Market. It's only a narrow door and is fairly easy to miss. It
has one bottle-glass window onto the street. This is a public
house which has not altered since the 1940s when it was very popular
with Dylan Thomas, Mervyn Peake, Ruthven Todd, Henry Treece and
a miscellaneous bunch of other Welsh adventurers who threatened
for a while to take over English poetry from the Irish.
It's a shit pub, so dark and smoky you can hardly find your glass
in front of your face, but the look of it keeps the tourists out.
It's used by all the culture pros -- from arty types with backpacks,
who do specialised walking tours, to famous gallery owners and
top museum management -- and by the heavy metal bikers. We all
get on a treat. We are mutually dependent in our continuing resistance
to invasion or change, to the preservation of the best and most
vital aspects of our culture. We leave them alone because they
protect us from the tourists, who might recognise us and make
us put on our masks in a hurry. They leave us alone because the
police won't want to bother a bunch of well-connected middle-class
wankers like us. It is a wonderful example of mutuality.
In the back rooms, thanks to some freaky acoustics, you can talk
easily above the music and hardly know it's there.
Over the years there have been some famous friendships and unions
struck between the two groups. My own lady wife was known as Karla
the She Goat in an earlier incarnation and had the most exquisite
and elaborate tattoos I ever saw. She was a wonderful wife and
would have made a perfect mother. She died on the Al, on the other
side of Watford Gap. She had just found out she was pregnant and
was making her last sentimental run. It did me in for marriage
after that. And urban romance.
I first heard about London Bone in the Princess Lou when Claire
Rood, that elegant old dike from the Barbican, who'd tipped me
off about my new tailor, pulled my ear to her mouth and asked
me in words of solid gin and garlic to look out for some for her,
darling. None of the usual faces seemed to know about it. A couple
of top level museum people knew a bit, but it was soon obvious
they were hoping I'd fill them in on the details. I showed them
a confident length of cuff. I told them to keep in touch.
I did my Friday walk, starting in the horrible pre-dawn chill
of the Portobello Road where some youth tried to sell me a bit
of scrimshawed reconstitute as 'the real old Bone'. I warmed myself
in the showrooms of elegant Kensington and Chelsea dealers telling
outrageous stories of deals, profits and crashes until they grew
uncomfortable and wanted to talk about me and I got the message
and left.
I wound up that evening in the urinal of The Dragoons in
Meard Alley, swapping long-time-no-sees with my boyhood friend
Bernie Michaud who begins immediately by telling me he's got a
bit of business I might be interested in. And since it's Bernie
Michaud telling me about it I listen. Bernie never deliberately
spread a rumour in his life but he's always known how to make
the best of one. This is kosher, he thinks. It has a bit of a
glow. It smells like a winner. A long-distance runner. He is telling
me out of friendship, but I'm not really interested. I'm trying
to find out about London Bone.
"I'm not talking drugs, Ray, you know that. And it's not
bent." Bernie's little pale face is serious. He takes a thoughtful
sip of his whisky. "It is, admittedly, a commodity."
I wasn't interested. I hadn't dealt in goods for years. "Services
only, Bernie," I said. "Remember. It's my rule. Who
wants to get stuck paying rent on a warehouse full of yesterday's
faves? I'm still trying to move those Glenda Sings Michael
Jackson sides Pratface talked me into."
"What about investment?" he says. "This is the
real business, Ray, believe me."
So I heard him out. It wouldn't be the first time Bernie had brought
me back a nice profit on some deal I'd helped him bankroll and
I was all right at the time. I'd just made the better part of
a month's turnover on a package of theatreland's most profitable
stinkers brokered for a party of filthy-rich New Muscovites who
thought Chekhov was something you did with your lottery numbers.
As they absorbed the quintessence of Euro-ersatz, guaranteed to
offer, as its high emotional moment, a long, relentless bowel
movement, I would be converting their hard roubles back into Beluga.
It's a turning world, the world of the international free market
and everything's wonderful and cute and pretty and magical
so long as you keep your place on the carousel. It's not good
if it stops. And it's worse if you get thrown off altogether.
Pray to Mammon that you never have to seek the help of an organization
that calls you a 'client'. That puts you outside the fairground
forever. No more rides. No more fun. No more life.
Bernie only did quality art, so I knew I could trust that side
of his judgement, but what was it? A new batch of Raphaels turned
up in a Willesden attic? Andy Warhol's lost landscapes found at
the Pheasantry?
"There's American collectors frenzied for this stuff,"
murmurs Bernie through a haze of Sons of the Wind, Motorchair
and Montecristo fumes. "And if it's decorated
they go through the roof. All the big Swiss guys are looking for
it. Freddy K in Cairo has a Saudi buyer who tops any price. Rose
Sarkissian in Agadir represents three French collectors. It's
never catalogued. It's all word of mouth. And it's already turning
over millions. There's one inferior piece in New York and none
at all in Paris. The pieces in Zurich are probably all fakes."
This made me feel that I was losing touch. I still didn't know
what he was getting at.
"Listen," I say, "before we go any further, let's
talk about this London Bone."
"You're a fly one, Ray," he says. "How did you
suss it?"
"Tell me what you know," I say. "And then I'll
fill you in."
We went out of the pub, bought some fish-and-chips at the Chinese
and then walked up Berwick Street and round to his little club
in D'Arblay Street where we sat down in his office and closed
the door. The place stank of cat-pee. He doted on his Persians.
They were all out in the club at the moment, being petted by the
patrons.
"First," he says, "I don't have to tell you Ray
that this is strictly double-schtum and I will kill you if a syllable
gets out."
"Naturally," I said.
"Have you ever seen any of this Bone?" he asked. He
went to his cupboard and found some vinegar and salt. "Or
better still handled it?"
"No," I said. "Not unless it's fake scrimshaw."
"This stuff's got a depth to it you've never dreamed about.
A lustre. You can tell it's the real thing as soon as you see
it. Not just the shapes or the decoration, but the quality of
it. It's like it's got a soul. You could come close, but you could
never fake it. Like amber, for instance. That's why the big collectors
are after it. It's authentic, it's newly-discovered and it's rare."
"What bone is it?"
"Mastodon. Some people still call it mammoth ivory, but I
haven't seen any actual ivory. It could be dinosaur. I don't know.
Anyway, this bone is better than ivory. Its in weird shapes,
probably fragments off some really big animal."
"And where's it coming from?"
"The heavy clay of good old London," says Bernie. "A
fortune at our feet, Ray. And my people know where to dig."
TWO
I had to be straight with Bernie. Until I saw a piece of the stuff
in my own hand and got an idea about it for myself, I couldn't
do anything. The only time in my life I'd gone for a gold brick
I'd bought it out of respect for the genius running the scam.
He deserved what I gave him. Which was a bit less than he was
hoping for. Rather than be conned, I would rather throw the
money away. I'm like that with everything.
I had my instincts, I told Bernie. I had to go with them. He understood
completely and we parted on good terms.
If the famous Lloyd Webber meltdown of 'O3 had happened a few
months earlier or later I would never have thought again about
going into the Bone business, but I was done in by one of those
sudden changes of public taste which made the George M. Cohan
crash of '31 seem like a run of The Mousetrap.
Sentimental fascism went out the window. Liberal-humanist contemporary
relevance, artistic aspiration, intellectual and moral substance
and all that stuff was somehow in demand. It was better than
the sixties. It was one of those splendid moments when the public
pulls itself together and tries to grow up. Jones's Rhyme of
the Flying Bomb song cycle made a glorious come-back. American
Angels returned with even more punch. And Sondheim made an
incredible come-back.
He became a quality brand-name. If it wasn't by Sondheim or based
on a tune Sondheim used to hum in the shower, the punters didn't
want to know. Overnight, the public's product loyalty had changed.
And I must admit it had changed for the better. But my investments
were in Cats, and Dogs (Lord Webber's last desperate
attempt to squeeze from Thurber what he sucked from Eliot), Duce!
and Starlight Excess, all of which were now taking a walk
down Sunset Boulevard. I couldn't even get a regular price
ticket for myself at Sunday in the Park, Assassins
or Follies. Into The Woods was solid for eighteen months
ahead. I saw Passion from the wings and Sweeney Todd
from the gods. Five Guys Named Mo crumbled to dust. Phantom
closed. Its author claimed sabotage.
"Quality will out, Ray," says Bernie next time I see
him at the Lou. "You've got to grant the public that. You
just have to give it time."
"Fuck the public," I said, with some feeling. "They're
just nostalgic for quality at the moment. Next year it'll be something
else. Meanwhile I'm bloody ruined. You couldn't drum a couple
of oncers on my entire stock. Even my ENO side-bets have died.
Covent Garden's a disaster. The weather in Milan didn't help.
That's where Cecilia Bartoli caught her cold. I was lucky to be
offered half-price for the Rossinis without her. And I know what
I'd do if I could get a varda at bloody Simon Rattle."
"So you won't be able to come in on the Bone deal?"
said Bernie returning to his own main point of interest.
"I said I was ruined," I told him, "not wiped out."
"Well, I got something to show you now, anyway," says
Bernie.
We went back to his place.
He put it in my hand as if it were a nugget of plutonium, a knuckle
of dark, golden Bone, split off from a larger piece, covered with
tiny pictures.
"The engravings are always on that kind of Bone," he
said. "There are other kinds that don't have drawings, maybe
from a later date. It's the work of the first Londoners, I suppose,
when it was still a swamp. About the time your Phoenician ancestors
started getting into the upriver woad-trade. I don't know the
significance, of course."
The Bone itself was hard to analyse because of the mixture of
chemicals which has created it and some of it had fused, suggesting
prehistoric upheavals of some kind. The drawings were extremely
primitive. Any bored person with a sharp object and minimum talent
could have done them at any time in history. The larger, weirder
looking Bones, had no engravings.
Stick people pursued other stick people endlessly across the fragment.
The work was unremarkable. The beauty really was in the tawny
ivory colour of the Bone alone. It glowed with a wealth of shades
and drew you hypnotically into its depths. I imagined the huge
animal of which this fragment had one been an active part. I saw
the bellowing trunk, the vast ears, the glinting tusks succumbing
suddenly to whatever had engulfed her. I saw her body swaying,
her tail lashing as she trumpeted her defiance of her inevitable
death. And now men sought her remains as treasure. It was a very
romantic image and of course it would become my most sincere sales
pitch.
"That's six million dollars you're holding there," said
Bernie. "Minimum."
Bernie had caught me at the right time and I had to admit I was
convinced. Back in his office he sketched out the agreement. We
would go in on a fifty-fifty basis, funding the guys who would
do the actual digging, who knew where the Bone-fields were and
who would tell us as soon as we showed serious interest. We would
finance all the work, pay them an upfront earnest and then load
by load in agreed increments. Bernie and I would split the net
profit fifty fifty. There were all kinds of clauses and provisions
covering the various problems we foresaw and then we had a deal.
The archeologists came round to my little place in Dolphin Square.
They were a scruffy bunch of students from the University of Norbury
who had discovered the Bone deposits on a run of the mill field
trip in a demolished Southwark housing estate and knew only that
there might be a market for them. Recent cuts to their grants
had made them desperate. Some lefty had come up with a law out
of the Magna Carta or somewhere saying public land couldn't be
sold to private developers and so there was a court case disputing
the council's right to sell the estate to Livingstone International
which also put a stop to the planned rebuilding so we had indefinite
time to work.
The stoodies were grateful for our expertise, as well as our cash.
I was happy enough with the situation. It was one I felt we could
easily control. Middle-class burbnerds get greedy the same as
anyone else, but they respond well to reason. I told them for
a start off that all the Bone had to come in to us. If any of
it leaked onto the market by other means, we'd risk losing our
prices and that would mean the scheme was over. Terminated, I
said significantly. Since we had reputations as well as investments
to protect there would also be recriminations. That's all I had
to say. Since those V serials kids think we're Krays and Mad Frankie
Frazers just because we like to look smart and talk properly.
We were fairly sure we weren't doing anything obviously criminal.
The stuff wasn't treasure trove. It had to be cleared before proper
foundations could be poured. Quite evidently LI didn't think it
was worth paying security staff to shuft the site. We didn't know
if digging shafts and tunnels was even trespass, but we knew we
had a few weeks before someone started asking about us and by
then we hoped to have the whole bloody mastodon out of the deep
clay and nicely earning for us. The selling would take the real
skill and that was my job. It was going to have to be played sharper
than South African diamonds.
After that neither Bernie nor I had anything to do with the dig.
We rented a guarded lockup in Clapham and paid the kids every
time they brought in a substantial load of Bone. It was incredible
stuff. Bernie thought that chemical action, some of it relatively
recent, had caused the phenomenon. "Like chalk, you know.
You hardly find it anywhere. Just a few places in England, France,
China and Texas." The kids reported that there was more than
one kind of animal down there, but that all the Bone had the same
rich appearance. They had constructed a new tunnel, with a hidden
entrance, so that even if the building site was blocked to them,
they could still get at the Bone. It seemed to be a huge field,
but most of the Bone was at roughly the same depth. Much of it
had fused and had to be chipped out. They had found no end to
it so far and they had tunneled through more than half an acre
of the dense, dark clay.
Meanwhile I was in Amsterdam and Rio, Paris and Vienna and New
York and Sydney. I was in Tokyo and Seoul and Hong Kong. I was
in Ryadh, Cairo and Baghdad. I was in Kampala and New Benin, everywhere
there were major punters. I racked up so many free airmiles in
a couple of months that they were automatically jumping me to
first class. But I achieved what I wanted. Nobody bought London
Bone without checking with me. I was the acknowledged expert.
The prime source, the best in the business. If you want Bone,
said the art world, you want Gold.
The Serious Fraud Squad became interested in Bone for a while,
but they had been assuming we were faking it and gave up when
it was obviously not rubbish.
Neither Bernie nor I expected it to last any longer than it did.
By the time our first phase of selling was over we were turning
over so much dough it was silly and the kids were getting tired
and were worrying about exploring some of their wildest dreams.
There was almost nothing left, they said. So we closed down the
operation, moved our warehouses a couple of times and then let
the Bone sit there to make us some money while everyone wondered
why it had dried up.
And at that moment, inevitably, and late as ever, the newspapers
caught on to the story. There was a brief late-night TV piece.
A few supplements talked about it in their arts pages. This led
to some news stories and eventually it went to the tabloids and
became anything you liked from the remains of Martians to a new
kind of nuclear waste. Anyone who saw the real stuff was convinced
but everyone had a theory about it. The real exclusive market
was finished. We kept schtum. We were gearing up for the second
phase. We got as far away from our stash as possible.
Of course a few faces tracked me down, but I denied any knowledge
of the Bone. I was a middle-man, I said. I just had good contacts.
Half-a-dozen people claimed to know where the Bone came from.
Of course they talked to the papers. I sat back in satisfied security,
watching the mud swirl over our tracks. Another couple of months
and we'd be even safer than the house I'd bought in Hampstead
overlooking the heath. It had a rather forlorn garden the size
of Kilburn which needed a lot of nurturing. That suited me. I
was ready to retire to the country and a big indoor swimming pool.
By the time a close version of the true story came out, from one
of the stoodies, who'd lost all his share in a lottery syndicate,
it was just one of many. It sounded too dull. I told newspaper
reporters that while I would love to have been involved in such
a lucrative scheme, my money came from theatre tickets. Meanwhile,
Bernie and I thought of our warehouse and said nothing.
Now the stuff was getting into the culture. It was chic. Puncher
used it in their ads. It was called Mammoth Bone by the media.
There was a common story about how a herd had wandered into the
swampy river and drowned in the mud. Lots of pictures dusted off
from the Natural History Museum. Experts explained the colour,
the depths, the markings, the beauty. Models sported a Bone motif.
Our second phase was to put a fair number of inferior fragments
on the market and see how the public responded. That would help
us find our popular price -- the most a customer would pay. We
were looking for a few good millionaires.
Frankly, as I told my partner, I was more than ready to get rid
of the lot. But Bernie counselled me to patience. We had a plan
and it made sense to stick to it.
The trade continued to run well for a while. As the sole source
of the stuff, we could pretty much control everything. Then one
Sunday lunchtime I met Bernie at The Six Jolly Dragoons
in Meard Alley, Soho. He had something to show me, he said. He
didn't even glance around. He put it on the bar in plain daylight.
A small piece of Bone with the remains of decorations still on
it.
"What about it?" I said.
"It's not ours," he said.
My first thought was that the stoodies had opened up the field
again. That they had lied to us when they said it had run out.
"No," said Bernie, "it's not even the same colour.
It's the same stuff -- but different shades. Gerry Goldstein lent
it to me."
"Where did he get it?"
"He was offered it," he said.
We didn't bother to speculate where it had come from. But we did
have rather a lot of our Bone to shift quickly. Against my will,
I made another world tour and sold mostly to other dealers this
time. It was a standard second-wave operation but run rather faster
than was wise. We definitely missed the crest.
However, before deliveries were in and cheques were cashed, Jack
Merrywidow, the fighting MP for Brookgate and E. Holborn, gets
up in the House of Commons on telly one afternoon and asks if
Prime Minister Bland or any of his dope-dazed cabinet understand
that human remains, taken from the hallowed burial grounds of
London, are being sold by the piece in the international market
place? Mr Bland makes a plummy joke enjoyed at Mr Merrywidow's
expense and sits down. But Jack won't give up. They're suddenly
on telly. It's The Struggle of Parliament time. Jack's
had the Bone examined by experts. It's human. Undoubtedly human.
The strange shapes are caused by limbs melting together in soil
heavy with lime. Chemical reactions, he says. We have -- he raises
his eyes to the camera -- been mining mass graves.
A shock to all those who still long for the years of common decency.
Someone, says Jack, is selling more than our heritage. Hasn't
free market capitalism got a little bit out of touch when we start
selling the arms, legs and skulls of our forebears? The torsos
and shoulder-blades of our honourable dead? What did we used to
call people who did that? When was the government going to stop
this trade in corpses?
It's denied.
It's proved.
It looks like trade is about to slump.
I think of framing the cheques as a reminder of the vagaries of
fate and give up any idea of popping the question to my old muse
Little Trudi, who is back on the market, having been dumped by
her corporate suit in a fit, he's told her, of self-disgust after
seeing The Tolstoy Investment with Eddie Izzard. Bernie,
I tell my partner, the Bone business is down the drain. We might
as well bin the stuff we've stockpiled.
Then two days later the TV news reports a vast public interest
in London Bone. Some lordly old queen with four names comes on
the evening news to say how by owning a piece of Bone, you own
London's true history. You become a curator of some ancient ancestor.
He's clearly got a vested interest in the stuff. It's the hottest
tourist item since Jack the Ripper razors and OJ gloves. More
people want to buy it than ever.
The only trouble is, I don't deal in dead people. It is, in fact,
where I have always drawn the line. Even Pratface Charlie wouldn't
sell his great, great grandmother's elbow to some overweight Jap
in a deerstalker and a kilt. I'm faced with a genuine moral dilemma.
I make a decision. I make a promise to myself. I can't got back
on that. I go down to the Italian chippy in Fortess Road, stoke
up on nourishing ritual grease (cod, roe, chips and mushy peas,
bread and butter and tea, syrup pudding), then heave my out of
shape, but mentally prepared, body up onto Parliament Hill to
roll myself a big wacky-baccy fag and let my subconscious think
the problem through.
When I emerge from my reverie, I have looked out over the whole
misty London panorama and considered the city's complex history.
I have thought about the number of dead buried there since, say,
the time of Bodicea, and what they mean to the soil we build on,
the food we still grow here and the air we breath. We are recycling
our ancestors all the time, one way or another. We are sucking
them in and shitting them out. We're eating them. We're drinking
them. We're coughing them up. The dead don't rest. Bits of them
are permanently at work. So what am I doing wrong?
This thought is comforting until my moral sense, sharpening itself
up after a long rest, kicks in with -- but what's different here
is you're flogging the stuff to people who take it home with them.
Back to Wisconsin and California and Peking. You take it out of
circulation. You're dissipating the deep fabric of the city. You're
unravelling something. Like, the real infrastructure, the spiritual
and physical bones of an ancient city...
On Kite Hill I suddenly realise that those bones are in some way
the deep lifestuff of London.
It grows dark over the towers and roofs of the metropolis. I sit
on my bench and roll myself up a further joint. I watch the silver
rising from the river, the deep golden glow of the distant lights,
the plush of the foliage, and as I watch it seems to shred before
my eyes, like a rotten curtain. Even the traffic noise grows fainter.
Is the city sick? Is she expiring? Somehow it seems there's a
little less breath in the old girl. I blame myself. And Bernie.
And those kids.
There and then, on the spot, I renounce all further interest in
the Bone trade. If nobody else will take the relics back, then
I will.
There's no resolve purer than the determination you draw from
a really good reefer.
THREE
So now there isn't a tourist in any London market or antique arcade
who isn't searching out Bone. They know it isn't cheap. They know
they have to pay. And pay they do. Through the nose. And half
of what they buy is crap or fakes. This is a question of status,
not authenticity. As long as we say it's good, they can say it's
good. We give it a provenance, a story, something to colour the
tale to the folks back home. We're honest dealers. We sell only
the authentic stuff. Still they get conned. But still they look.
Still they buy.
Jealous Mancunians and Brummies long for a history old enough
to provide them with Bone. A few of the early settlements, like
Chester and York, start turning up something like it, but it's
not the same. Jim Morrison's remains disappear from Pere La
Chaise. They might be someone else's bones, anyway. Rumour
is they were KFC bones. The revolutionary death-pits fail to deliver
the goods. The French are furious. They accuse the British of
gross materialism and poor taste. Oscar Wilde disappears. George
Eliot. Winston Churchill. You name them. For a few months there
is a grotesque trade in the remains of the famous. But the fashion
has no intrinsic substance and fizzles out. Anyone could have
seen it wouldn't run.
Bone has the image, because Bone really is beautiful.
Too many people are yearning for that Bone. The real stuff. It
genuinely hurts me to disappoint them. Circumstances alter cases.
Against my better judgement I continue in the business. I bend
my principles, just for the duration. We have as much turnover
as we had selling to the Swiss gnomes. It's the latest item on
the beento list. 'You have to bring me back some
London Bone, Ethel, or I'll never forgive you!' It starts to appear
in the American luxury catalogs.
But by now there are ratsniffers everywhere -- from Trade and
Industry, from the National Trust, from the Heritage Corp, from
half-a-dozen South London councils, from the Special Branch, from
the CID, the Inland Revenue and both the Funny and the Serious
Fraud Squads.
Any busybody who ever wanted to put his head under someone else's
bed is having a wonderful time. Having failed dramatically with
the STOP THIS DISGUSTING TRADE approach, the tabloids switch to
offering bits of Bone as prizes in circulation boosters. I sell
a newspaper consortium a Tesco's plastic bagfull for two-and-a-half
mill via a go-between. Bernie and I are getting almost frighteningly
rich. I open some bank accounts off-shore and I became an important
anonymous shareholder in the Queen Elizabeth Hall when it's privatized.
It doesn't take long for the experts to come up with an analysis.
Most of the Bone has been down there since the seventeenth century
and earlier. They are the sites of the old plague pits where legend
had it still living corpses were thrown in with the dead. For
a while it must have seemed like Auschwitz-on-Thames. The chemical
action of lime, partial burning, London clay and decaying flesh,
together with the broadening spread of the London water-table,
thanks to various engineering works over the last century, letting
untreated sewage into the mix, had created our unique London Bone.
As for the decorations, that, it was opined, was the work of the
pit guards, working on earlier bones found on the same site.
"Blood, shit and bone," says Bernie. "It's what
make the world go round. That and money, of course."
"And love," I add. I'm doing all right these days. It's
true what they say about a Roller. Little Trudi has enthusiastically
rediscovered my attractions. She has her eye on a ring. I raise
my glass. "And love, Bernie."
"Fuck that," says Bernie. "Not in my experience."
He's buying Paul McCartney's old place in Wamering and having
it converted for Persians. He has, it is true, also bought his
wife her dream house. She doesn't seem to mind it's on the island
of Las Cascadas about six miles off the coast of Morocco. She's
at last agreed to divorce him. Apart from his mother, she's the
only woman he ever had anything to do with and he isn't, he says,
planning to try another. The only females he wants in his house
in future come with a pedigree a mile long, have all their shots
and can be bought at Harrods.
FOUR
I expect you heard what happened. The private Bonefields, which
contractors were discovering all over South and West London, actually
contained public bones. They were part of our national inheritance.
They had living relatives. And stones, some of them. So it became
a political and a moral issue. The Church got involved. The airwaves
were crowded with concerned clergy. There was the problem of the
self-named bone-miners. Kids, inspired by our leaders' rhetoric,
and aspiring to imitate those great captains of free enterprise
they had been taught to admire, were turning over ordinary graveyards,
which they'd already stripped of their saleable masonry, and digging
up somewhat fresher stiffs than was seemly.
A bit too fresh. It was pointless. The Bone took centuries to
get seasoned and so far nobody had been able to fake the process.
A few of the older graveyards had small deposits of Bone in them.
Brompton Cemetery had a surprising amount, for instance, and so
did Highgate. This attracted prospectors. They used shovels mainly,
but sometimes low explosives. The area around Karl Marx's monument
looked like they'd refought the Russian Civil War over it. The
barbed wire put in after the event hadn't helped. And as usual
the public paid to clean up after private enterprise. Nobody in
their right mind got buried any more. Cremation became very popular.
The borough councils and their financial managers were happy because
more valuable real estate wasn't being occupied by a non-consumer.
It didn't matter how many security guards were posted or, by one
extreme Authority, land-mines, the teenies left no grave unturned.
Bone was still a profitable item, even though the market had settled
down since we started. They dug up Bernie's mother. They dug up
my cousin Leonard. There wasn't a Londoner who didn't have some
intimate unexpectedly back above ground. Every night you saw it
on telly.
It had caught the public imagination. The media had never made
much of the desecrated graveyards, the chiselled-off angels' heads
and the uprooted headstones on sale in King's Road and the Boulevard
St. Michel since the nineteen seventies. These had been the targets
of first generation grave-robbers. Then there had seemed nothing
left to steal. Even they had balked at doing the corpses. Besides,
there wasn't a market. This second generation was making up for
lost time, turning over the soil faster than an earthworm on E.
The news shots became clichés. The heaped earth, the headstone,
the smashed coffin, the hint of the contents, the leader of the
Opposition coming on to say how all this has happened since his
mirror image got elected. The councils argued that they should
be given the authority to deal with the problem. They owned the
graveyards. And also, they reasoned, the Bonefields. The profits
from those fields should rightly go into the public purse. They
could help pay for the Health Service. "Let the dead,"
went their favourite slogan, "pay for the living for a change."
What the local politicians actually meant was that they hoped
to claim the land in the name of the public and then make the
usual profits privatising it. There was a principle at stake.
They had to ensure their friends and not outsiders got the benefit.
The High Court eventually gave the judgement to the public, which
really meant turning it over to some of the most rapacious borough
councils in our history. A decade or so earlier, that Charlie
Peace of elected bodies, the Westminster City Council, had tried
to sell their old graveyards to new developers. This current judgement
allowed all councils at last to maximise their assets from what
was, after all, dead land, completely unable to pay for itself,
and therefore a natural target for privatization. The feeding
frenzy began. It was the closest thing to mass cannibalism I've
ever seen.
We had opened a fronter in Old Sweden Street and had a couple
of halfway presentable slags from Bernie's club taking the calls
and answering enquiries. We were straight up about it. We called
it The City Bone Exchange. The bloke who decorated it and
did the sign specialised in giving offices that long-established
look. He'd created most of those old-fashioned West End Hotels
you'd never heard of until 1999. "If it's got a Scottish
name," he used to say, "it's one of mine. Americans
love the skirl of the pipes, but they trust a bit of brass and
varnish best."
Our place was almost all brass and varnish. And it worked a treat.
The Ritz and the Savoy sent us their best potential buyers. Incredibly
exclusive private hotels gave us taxi-loads of bland-faced American
boy-men, reeking of health and beauty products, bellowing their
credentials to the wind, rich matrons eager for anyone's approval,
massive Germans with aggressive cackles, stern orientals glaring
at us, daring us to cheat them. They bought. And they bought.
And they bought.
The snoopers kept on snooping but there wasn't really much to
find out. Livingstone International took an aggressive interest
in us for a while, but what could they do? We weren't up to anything
illegal just selling the stuff and nobody could identify what
if anything had been nicked anyway. I still had my misgivings.
They weren't anything but superstitions, really. It did seem sometimes
that for every layer of false antiquity, for every act of disneyfication,
an inch or two of our real foundations crumbled. You knew what
happened when you did that to a house. Sooner or later you got
trouble. Sooner or later you had no house.
We had more than our share of private detectives for a while.
They always pretended to be customers and they always looked wrong,
even to our girls. Livingstone International had definitely made
a connection. I think they'd found our mine and guessed what a
windfall they'd lost. They didn't seem at one with themselves
over the matter. They even made veiled threats. There was some
swagger come in to talk about violence but they were spotties
who'd got all their language off old nineties TV shows. So we
sweated it out and the girls took most of the heat. Those girls
really didn't know anything. They were magnificently ignorant.
They had tellies with chips which switch channels as soon as they
detect a news or information programme.
I've always had a rule. If you're caught by the same wave twice,
get out of the water.
While I didn't blame myself for not anticipating the Great Andrew
Lloyd Webber Slump, I think I should have guessed what would happen
next. The tolerance of the public for bullshit had become decidedly
and aggressively negative. It was like the Bone had set new standards
of public aspiration as well as beauty. My dad used to say that
about the Blitz. Classical music enjoyed a huge success during
the Second World War. Everybody grew up at once. The Bone had
made it happen again. It was a bit frightening to those of us
who had always relied on a nice, passive, gullible, greedy punter
for an income.
The bitter fights which had developed over graveyard and Bonefield
rights and boundaries, the eagerness with which some borough councils
exploited their new resource, the unseemly trade in what was,
after all, human remains, the corporate involvement, the incredible
profits, the hypocrisies and politics around the Bone brought
us the outspoken disgust of Europe. We were used to that. In fact,
we tended to cultivate it. But that wasn't the problem.
The problem was that our own public had had enough.
When the elections came round, the voters systematically booted
out anyone who had supported the Bone trade. It was like the sudden
rise of the anti-slavery vote in Lincoln's America. They demanded
an end to the commerce in London Bone. They got the Boneshops
closed down. They got work on the Bonefields stopped. They got
their graveyards and monuments protected and cleaned up. They
got a city which started cultivating peace and security as if
it was a cash crop. Which maybe it was. But it hurt me.
It was the end of my easy money, of course. I'll admit I was glad
it was stopping. It felt like they were slowing entropy, restoring
the past. The quality of life improved. I began to think about
letting a few rooms for company.
The mood of the country swung so far into disapproval of the Bone
trade that I almost began to fear for my life. Road- and anti-abortion
activists switched their attention to Bone merchants. Hampstead
was full of screaming lefties convinced they owned the moral highground
just because they'd paid off their enormous mortgages. Trudi,
after three months, applied for a divorce, arguing that she had
not known my business when she married me. She said she was disgusted.
She said I'd been living on blood-money. The courts awarded her
more than half of what I'd made, but it didn't matter any more.
My investments were such that I couldn't stop earning. Economically,
I was a small oil-producing nation. I had my own international
dialling code. It was horrible in a way. Unless I tried very hard,
it looked like I could never be ruined again. There was no justice.
I met Bernie in The King Lyar in Old Sweden Street, a few
doors down from our burned out office. I told him what I planned
to do and he shrugged.
"We both knew it was dodgy," he told me. "It was
dodgy all along, even when we thought it was mastodons. What it
feels like to me, Ray, is -- it feels like a sort of a massive
transformation of the zeitgeist -- you know, like Virginia
Woolf said about the day human nature changed -- something happens
slowly and you're not aware of it. Everything seems normal. Then
you wake up one morning and -- bingo! -- it's Nazi Germany or
Bolshevik Russia or Thatcherite England or the Golden Age -- and
all the rules have changed."
"Maybe it was the Bone that did it," I said. "Maybe
it was a symbol everyone needed to rally round. You know. A focus."
"Maybe," he said. "Let me know when you're doing
it. I'll give you a hand."
About a week later we got the van backed up to the warehouse loading
bay. It was three o'clock in the morning and I was chilled to
the marrow. Working in silence we transferred every scrap of Bone
to the van. Then we drove back to Hampstead through a freezing
rain.
I don't know why we did it the way we did it. There would have
been easier solutions, I suppose. But behind the high walls of
my big back garden, under the old trees and etiolated rhododendrons,
we dug a pit and filled it with the glowing remains of the ancient
dead.
The stuff was almost phosphorescent as we chucked the big lumps
of clay back on to it. It glowed a rich amber and that faint,
rosemary smell came off it. I can still smell it when I go in
there to this day. My soft fruit is out of this world. The whole
garden's doing wonderfully now.
In fact London's doing wonderfully. We seem to be back on form.
There's still a bit of a Bone trade, of course, but it's marginal.
Every so often I'm tempted to take a spade and turn over the earth
again, to look at the fortune I'm hiding there. To look at the
beauty of it. The strange amber glow never fades and sometimes
I think the decoration on the Bone is an important message I should
perhaps try to decipher.
I'm still a very rich man. Not justly so, but there it is. And,
of course, I'm about as popular with the public as Percy the Paedophile.
Gold the Bone King? I might as well be Gold the Grave Robber.
I don't go down to Soho much. When I do make it to a show or something
I try to disguise myself a bit. I don't see anything of Bernie
any more and I heard two of the stoodies topped themselves.
I do my best to make amends. I'm circulating my profits as fast
as I can. Talent's flooding into London from everywhere, making
a powerful mix. They say they haven't known a buzz like it since
1967. I'm a reliable investor in great new shows. Every year I
back the Iggy Pop Awards, the most prestigious in the business.
But not everybody will take my money. I am regularly reviled.
That's why some organisations receive anonymous donations. They
would refuse them if they knew they were from me.
I've had the extremes of good and bad luck riding this particular
switch in the zeitgeist and the only time I'm happy is when I
wake up in the morning and I've forgotten who I am. It seems I
share a common disgust for myself.
A few dubious customers, however, think I owe them something.
Another bloke, who used to be very rich before he made some frenetic
investments after his career went down the drain, called me the
other day. He knew of my interest in the theatre, that I had invested
in several West End hits. He thought I'd be interested in his
idea. He wanted to revive his first success, Rebecca's Incredibly
Far Out Well or something, which he described as a
powerful religious rock opera guaranteed to capture the new nostalgia
market. The times, he told me, they were a-changin'. His show,
he continued, was full of raw old-fashioned R&B energy. Just
the sort of authentic sound to attract the new no-nonsense youngsters.
Wasn't it cool that Madonna wanted to do the title role? And Bob
Geldof would play the Spirit of the Well. Rock and roll, man!
It's all in the staging, man! Remember the boat in Phantom? I
can make it look better than real. On stage, man, that well is
W.E.T. WET! Rock and roll! I could see that little wizened
fist punching the air in a parody of the vitality he craved and
whose source had always eluded him.
I had to tell him it was a non-starter. I'd turned over a new
leaf, I said. I was taking my ethics seriously.
These days I only deal in living talent.
![](../../../../www.users.zetnet.co.uk/iplus/images/divsmall.gif) © Michael Moorcock 1998, 1999.
This story first appeared in New Worlds, 1998.
Elsewhere in infinity plus:
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London Bone - a novelette by Michael Moorcock
![](../../../../www.users.zetnet.co.uk/iplus/images/1by1.gif) |
London Bone
a novelette
by
Michael Moorcock
For Ronnie Scott
ONE
My name is Raymond Gold and I'm a well-known dealer. I was born
too many years ago in Upper Street, Islington. Everybody reckons
me in the London markets and I have a good reputation in Manchester
and the provinces. I have bought and sold, been the middleman,
an agent, an art representative, a professional mentor, a tour
guide, a spiritual bridge-builder. These days I call myself a
cultural speculator.
But, you won't like it, the more familiar word for my profession,
as I practised it until recently, is scalper. This kind
of language is just another way of isolating the small businessman
and making what he does seem sleazy while the stockbroker dealing
in millions is supposed to be legitimate. But I don't need to
convince anyone today that there's no sodding justice.
'Scalping' is risky. What you do is invest in tickets on spec
and hope to make a timely sale when the market for them hits zenith.
Any kind of ticket, really, but mostly shows. I've never seen
anything offensive about getting the maximum possible profit out
of an American matron with more money than sense who's anxious
to report home with the right items ticked off the beento
list. We've all seen them rushing about in their overpriced limos
and mini-buses, pretending to be individuals: Thursday:
Changing-of-the-Guard, Harrods, Planet Hollywood, Royal Academy,
Tea-At-the-Ritz, Cats. It's a sort of tribal dance
they all feel compelled to perform. If they don't perform it,
they feel inadequate. Saturday:
Tower of London, Bucket of Blood, Jack-the-Ripper talk, Sherlock
Holmes Pub, Sherlock Holmes tour, Madame Tussaud's, Covent Garden
Cream Tea, Dogs. These are people so traumatized by
contact with strangers that their only security lies in these
rituals, these well-blazed trails and familiar chants. It's my
job to smooth their paths, to make them exclaim how pretty and
wonderful and elegant and magical it all is. The street
people aren't a problem. They're just so many charming Dick Van
Dykes.
Americans need bullshit the way koala bears need eucalyptus leaves.
They've become totally addicted to it. They get so much of it
back home that they can't survive without it. It's your duty to
help them get their regular fixes while they travel. And when
they make it back after three weeks on alien shores, their friends,
of course, are always glad of some foreign bullshit for a change.
Even if you sell a show ticket to a real enthusiast, who has already
been forty nine times and is so familiar to the cast they see
him in the street and think he's a relative, who are you hurting?
Andros Loud Website, Lady Hatchet's loyal laureate, who achieved
rank and wealth by celebrating the lighter side of the moral vacuum?
He would surely applaud my enterprise in the buccaneering spirit
of the free market. Venture capitalism at its bravest. Well, he'd
applaud me if he had time these days from his railings against
fate, his horrible understanding of the true nature of his coming
obscurity. But that's partly what my story's about.
I have to say in my own favour that I'm not merely a speculator
or, if you like, exploiter. I'm also a patron. For many years,
not just recently, a niagara of dosh has flowed out of my pocket
and into the real arts faster than a cat up a Frenchman. Whole
orchestras and famous soloists have been brought to the Wigmore
Hall on the money they get from me. But I couldn't have afforded
this if it wasn't for the definitely iffy Miss Saigon (a
triumph of well-oiled machinery over dodgy morality) or the unbelievably
decrepit Good Rockin' Tonite (in which the living dead
jive in the aisles), nor, of course, that first great theatrical
triumph of the new millennium, Schindler: The Musical.
Make 'em weep, Uncle Walt!
So who is helping most to support the arts? You, me, the lottery?
I had another reputation, of course, which some saw as a second
profession. I was one of the last great London characters. I was
always on late-night telly lit from below and Iain Sinclair couldn't
write a paragraph without dropping my name at least once. I'm
a quintessential Londoner, I am. I'm a Cockney gentleman.
I read Israel Zangwill and Gerald Kersh and Alexander Barron.
I can tell you the best books of Pett Ridge and Arthur Morrison.
I know Pratface Charlie, Driff and Martin Stone, Bernie Michaud
and the even more legendary Gerry and Pat Goldstein. They're all
historians, archeologists, revenants. There isn't another culture-dealer
in London, oldster or child, who doesn't at some time come to
me for an opinion. Even now, when I'm as popular as a pig at a
Putney wedding and people hold their noses and dive into traffic
rather than have to say hello to me, they still need me for that.
I've known all the famous Londoners or known someone else who
did. I can tell stories of long-dead gangsters who made the Krays
seem like Amnesty International. Bare-knuckle boxing. Fighting
the fascists in the East End. Gun-battles with the police all
over Stepney in the 1900s. The terrifying girl gangsters of Whitechapel.
Barricading the Old Bill in his own barracks down in Notting Dale.
I can tell you where all the music halls were and what was sung
in them. And why. I can tell Marie Lloyd stories and Max Miller
stories that are fresh and sharp and bawdy as the day they happened,
because their wit and experience came out of the market streets
of London. The same streets. The same markets. The same family
names. London is markets. Markets are London.
I'm a Londoner through and through. I know Mr Gog personally.
I know Ma Gog even more personally. During the day I can walk
anywhere from Bow to Bayswater faster than any taxi. I love the
markets. Brick Lane. Church Street. Portobello. You won't find
me on a bike with my bum in the air on a winter's afternoon. I
walk or drive. Nothing in between. I wear a camel-hair in winter
and a Barraclough's in summer. You know what would happen
to a coat like that on a bike.
I love the theatre. I like modern dance, very good movies and
ambitious international contemporary music. I like poetry, prose,
painting and the decorative arts. I like the lot, the very best
that London's got, the whole bloody casserole. I gobble it all
up and bang on my bowl for more. Let timid greenbelters creep
in at weekends and sink themselves in the West End's familiar
deodorised shit if they want to. That's not my city. That's a
tourist set. It's what I live off. What all of us show-people
live off. It's the old, familiar circus. The big rotate.
We're selling what everybody recognises. What makes them feel
safe and certain and sure of every single moment in the city.
Nothing to worry about in jolly old London. We sell charm and
colour by the yard. Whole word factories turn out new rhyming
slang and saucy street characters are trained on council grants.
Don't frighten the horses. Licensed pearlies pause for a photo-opportunity
in the dockside Secure Zones. Without all that cheap scenery,
without our myths and magical skills, without our whorish good
cheer and instincts for trade -- any kind of trade -- we probably
wouldn't have a living city.
As it is, the real city I live in has per square inch more creative
energy at work at any given moment than anywhere else on the planet.
But you'd never know it from a stroll up the Strand. It's almost
all in those lively little sidestreets the English-speaking tourists
can't help feeling a bit nervous about and which the French adore.
If you use music for comfortable escape you'd probably find more
satisfying and cheaper relief in a massage parlour than at the
umpteenth revival of The Sound of Music. I'd tell that
to any hesitant punter who's not too sure. Check out the phone
boxes for the ladies, I'd say, or you can go to the half-price
ticket-booth in Leicester Square and pick up a ticket that'll
deliver real value -- Ibsen or Shakespeare, Shaw or Greenbank.
Certainly you can fork out three hundred sheets for a fifty sheet
ticket that in a justly-ordered world wouldn't be worth two pee
and have your ears salved and your cradle rocked for two hours.
Don't worry, I'd tell them, I make no judgements. Some hard-working
whore profits, whatever you decide. So who's the cynic?
I went on one of those tours when my friends Dave and Di from
Bury came up for the Festival of London in 200l and it's
amazing the crap they tell people. They put sex, violence and
money into every story. They know fuck-all. They soup everything
up. It's Sun-reader history. Even the Beefeaters at the
Tower. Poppinsland. All that old English duff.
It makes you glad to get back to Soho.
Not so long ago you would usually find me in the Princess Louise,
Berwick Street, at lunch time, a few doors down from the Chinese
chippy and just across from Mrs White's trim stall in Berwick
Market. It's only a narrow door and is fairly easy to miss. It
has one bottle-glass window onto the street. This is a public
house which has not altered since the 1940s when it was very popular
with Dylan Thomas, Mervyn Peake, Ruthven Todd, Henry Treece and
a miscellaneous bunch of other Welsh adventurers who threatened
for a while to take over English poetry from the Irish.
It's a shit pub, so dark and smoky you can hardly find your glass
in front of your face, but the look of it keeps the tourists out.
It's used by all the culture pros -- from arty types with backpacks,
who do specialised walking tours, to famous gallery owners and
top museum management -- and by the heavy metal bikers. We all
get on a treat. We are mutually dependent in our continuing resistance
to invasion or change, to the preservation of the best and most
vital aspects of our culture. We leave them alone because they
protect us from the tourists, who might recognise us and make
us put on our masks in a hurry. They leave us alone because the
police won't want to bother a bunch of well-connected middle-class
wankers like us. It is a wonderful example of mutuality.
In the back rooms, thanks to some freaky acoustics, you can talk
easily above the music and hardly know it's there.
Over the years there have been some famous friendships and unions
struck between the two groups. My own lady wife was known as Karla
the She Goat in an earlier incarnation and had the most exquisite
and elaborate tattoos I ever saw. She was a wonderful wife and
would have made a perfect mother. She died on the Al, on the other
side of Watford Gap. She had just found out she was pregnant and
was making her last sentimental run. It did me in for marriage
after that. And urban romance.
I first heard about London Bone in the Princess Lou when Claire
Rood, that elegant old dike from the Barbican, who'd tipped me
off about my new tailor, pulled my ear to her mouth and asked
me in words of solid gin and garlic to look out for some for her,
darling. None of the usual faces seemed to know about it. A couple
of top level museum people knew a bit, but it was soon obvious
they were hoping I'd fill them in on the details. I showed them
a confident length of cuff. I told them to keep in touch.
I did my Friday walk, starting in the horrible pre-dawn chill
of the Portobello Road where some youth tried to sell me a bit
of scrimshawed reconstitute as 'the real old Bone'. I warmed myself
in the showrooms of elegant Kensington and Chelsea dealers telling
outrageous stories of deals, profits and crashes until they grew
uncomfortable and wanted to talk about me and I got the message
and left.
I wound up that evening in the urinal of The Dragoons in
Meard Alley, swapping long-time-no-sees with my boyhood friend
Bernie Michaud who begins immediately by telling me he's got a
bit of business I might be interested in. And since it's Bernie
Michaud telling me about it I listen. Bernie never deliberately
spread a rumour in his life but he's always known how to make
the best of one. This is kosher, he thinks. It has a bit of a
glow. It smells like a winner. A long-distance runner. He is telling
me out of friendship, but I'm not really interested. I'm trying
to find out about London Bone.
"I'm not talking drugs, Ray, you know that. And it's not
bent." Bernie's little pale face is serious. He takes a thoughtful
sip of his whisky. "It is, admittedly, a commodity."
I wasn't interested. I hadn't dealt in goods for years. "Services
only, Bernie," I said. "Remember. It's my rule. Who
wants to get stuck paying rent on a warehouse full of yesterday's
faves? I'm still trying to move those Glenda Sings Michael
Jackson sides Pratface talked me into."
"What about investment?" he says. "This is the
real business, Ray, believe me."
So I heard him out. It wouldn't be the first time Bernie had brought
me back a nice profit on some deal I'd helped him bankroll and
I was all right at the time. I'd just made the better part of
a month's turnover on a package of theatreland's most profitable
stinkers brokered for a party of filthy-rich New Muscovites who
thought Chekhov was something you did with your lottery numbers.
As they absorbed the quintessence of Euro-ersatz, guaranteed to
offer, as its high emotional moment, a long, relentless bowel
movement, I would be converting their hard roubles back into Beluga.
It's a turning world, the world of the international free market
and everything's wonderful and cute and pretty and magical
so long as you keep your place on the carousel. It's not good
if it stops. And it's worse if you get thrown off altogether.
Pray to Mammon that you never have to seek the help of an organization
that calls you a 'client'. That puts you outside the fairground
forever. No more rides. No more fun. No more life.
Bernie only did quality art, so I knew I could trust that side
of his judgement, but what was it? A new batch of Raphaels turned
up in a Willesden attic? Andy Warhol's lost landscapes found at
the Pheasantry?
"There's American collectors frenzied for this stuff,"
murmurs Bernie through a haze of Sons of the Wind, Motorchair
and Montecristo fumes. "And if it's decorated
they go through the roof. All the big Swiss guys are looking for
it. Freddy K in Cairo has a Saudi buyer who tops any price. Rose
Sarkissian in Agadir represents three French collectors. It's
never catalogued. It's all word of mouth. And it's already turning
over millions. There's one inferior piece in New York and none
at all in Paris. The pieces in Zurich are probably all fakes."
This made me feel that I was losing touch. I still didn't know
what he was getting at.
"Listen," I say, "before we go any further, let's
talk about this London Bone."
"You're a fly one, Ray," he says. "How did you
suss it?"
"Tell me what you know," I say. "And then I'll
fill you in."
We went out of the pub, bought some fish-and-chips at the Chinese
and then walked up Berwick Street and round to his little club
in D'Arblay Street where we sat down in his office and closed
the door. The place stank of cat-pee. He doted on his Persians.
They were all out in the club at the moment, being petted by the
patrons.
"First," he says, "I don't have to tell you Ray
that this is strictly double-schtum and I will kill you if a syllable
gets out."
"Naturally," I said.
"Have you ever seen any of this Bone?" he asked. He
went to his cupboard and found some vinegar and salt. "Or
better still handled it?"
"No," I said. "Not unless it's fake scrimshaw."
"This stuff's got a depth to it you've never dreamed about.
A lustre. You can tell it's the real thing as soon as you see
it. Not just the shapes or the decoration, but the quality of
it. It's like it's got a soul. You could come close, but you could
never fake it. Like amber, for instance. That's why the big collectors
are after it. It's authentic, it's newly-discovered and it's rare."
"What bone is it?"
"Mastodon. Some people still call it mammoth ivory, but I
haven't seen any actual ivory. It could be dinosaur. I don't know.
Anyway, this bone is better than ivory. Its in weird shapes,
probably fragments off some really big animal."
"And where's it coming from?"
"The heavy clay of good old London," says Bernie. "A
fortune at our feet, Ray. And my people know where to dig."
TWO
I had to be straight with Bernie. Until I saw a piece of the stuff
in my own hand and got an idea about it for myself, I couldn't
do anything. The only time in my life I'd gone for a gold brick
I'd bought it out of respect for the genius running the scam.
He deserved what I gave him. Which was a bit less than he was
hoping for. Rather than be conned, I would rather throw the
money away. I'm like that with everything.
I had my instincts, I told Bernie. I had to go with them. He understood
completely and we parted on good terms.
If the famous Lloyd Webber meltdown of 'O3 had happened a few
months earlier or later I would never have thought again about
going into the Bone business, but I was done in by one of those
sudden changes of public taste which made the George M. Cohan
crash of '31 seem like a run of The Mousetrap.
Sentimental fascism went out the window. Liberal-humanist contemporary
relevance, artistic aspiration, intellectual and moral substance
and all that stuff was somehow in demand. It was better than
the sixties. It was one of those splendid moments when the public
pulls itself together and tries to grow up. Jones's Rhyme of
the Flying Bomb song cycle made a glorious come-back. American
Angels returned with even more punch. And Sondheim made an
incredible come-back.
He became a quality brand-name. If it wasn't by Sondheim or based
on a tune Sondheim used to hum in the shower, the punters didn't
want to know. Overnight, the public's product loyalty had changed.
And I must admit it had changed for the better. But my investments
were in Cats, and Dogs (Lord Webber's last desperate
attempt to squeeze from Thurber what he sucked from Eliot), Duce!
and Starlight Excess, all of which were now taking a walk
down Sunset Boulevard. I couldn't even get a regular price
ticket for myself at Sunday in the Park, Assassins
or Follies. Into The Woods was solid for eighteen months
ahead. I saw Passion from the wings and Sweeney Todd
from the gods. Five Guys Named Mo crumbled to dust. Phantom
closed. Its author claimed sabotage.
"Quality will out, Ray," says Bernie next time I see
him at the Lou. "You've got to grant the public that. You
just have to give it time."
"Fuck the public," I said, with some feeling. "They're
just nostalgic for quality at the moment. Next year it'll be something
else. Meanwhile I'm bloody ruined. You couldn't drum a couple
of oncers on my entire stock. Even my ENO side-bets have died.
Covent Garden's a disaster. The weather in Milan didn't help.
That's where Cecilia Bartoli caught her cold. I was lucky to be
offered half-price for the Rossinis without her. And I know what
I'd do if I could get a varda at bloody Simon Rattle."
"So you won't be able to come in on the Bone deal?"
said Bernie returning to his own main point of interest.
"I said I was ruined," I told him, "not wiped out."
"Well, I got something to show you now, anyway," says
Bernie.
We went back to his place.
He put it in my hand as if it were a nugget of plutonium, a knuckle
of dark, golden Bone, split off from a larger piece, covered with
tiny pictures.
"The engravings are always on that kind of Bone," he
said. "There are other kinds that don't have drawings, maybe
from a later date. It's the work of the first Londoners, I suppose,
when it was still a swamp. About the time your Phoenician ancestors
started getting into the upriver woad-trade. I don't know the
significance, of course."
The Bone itself was hard to analyse because of the mixture of
chemicals which has created it and some of it had fused, suggesting
prehistoric upheavals of some kind. The drawings were extremely
primitive. Any bored person with a sharp object and minimum talent
could have done them at any time in history. The larger, weirder
looking Bones, had no engravings.
Stick people pursued other stick people endlessly across the fragment.
The work was unremarkable. The beauty really was in the tawny
ivory colour of the Bone alone. It glowed with a wealth of shades
and drew you hypnotically into its depths. I imagined the huge
animal of which this fragment had one been an active part. I saw
the bellowing trunk, the vast ears, the glinting tusks succumbing
suddenly to whatever had engulfed her. I saw her body swaying,
her tail lashing as she trumpeted her defiance of her inevitable
death. And now men sought her remains as treasure. It was a very
romantic image and of course it would become my most sincere sales
pitch.
"That's six million dollars you're holding there," said
Bernie. "Minimum."
Bernie had caught me at the right time and I had to admit I was
convinced. Back in his office he sketched out the agreement. We
would go in on a fifty-fifty basis, funding the guys who would
do the actual digging, who knew where the Bone-fields were and
who would tell us as soon as we showed serious interest. We would
finance all the work, pay them an upfront earnest and then load
by load in agreed increments. Bernie and I would split the net
profit fifty fifty. There were all kinds of clauses and provisions
covering the various problems we foresaw and then we had a deal.
The archeologists came round to my little place in Dolphin Square.
They were a scruffy bunch of students from the University of Norbury
who had discovered the Bone deposits on a run of the mill field
trip in a demolished Southwark housing estate and knew only that
there might be a market for them. Recent cuts to their grants
had made them desperate. Some lefty had come up with a law out
of the Magna Carta or somewhere saying public land couldn't be
sold to private developers and so there was a court case disputing
the council's right to sell the estate to Livingstone International
which also put a stop to the planned rebuilding so we had indefinite
time to work.
The stoodies were grateful for our expertise, as well as our cash.
I was happy enough with the situation. It was one I felt we could
easily control. Middle-class burbnerds get greedy the same as
anyone else, but they respond well to reason. I told them for
a start off that all the Bone had to come in to us. If any of
it leaked onto the market by other means, we'd risk losing our
prices and that would mean the scheme was over. Terminated, I
said significantly. Since we had reputations as well as investments
to protect there would also be recriminations. That's all I had
to say. Since those V serials kids think we're Krays and Mad Frankie
Frazers just because we like to look smart and talk properly.
We were fairly sure we weren't doing anything obviously criminal.
The stuff wasn't treasure trove. It had to be cleared before proper
foundations could be poured. Quite evidently LI didn't think it
was worth paying security staff to shuft the site. We didn't know
if digging shafts and tunnels was even trespass, but we knew we
had a few weeks before someone started asking about us and by
then we hoped to have the whole bloody mastodon out of the deep
clay and nicely earning for us. The selling would take the real
skill and that was my job. It was going to have to be played sharper
than South African diamonds.
After that neither Bernie nor I had anything to do with the dig.
We rented a guarded lockup in Clapham and paid the kids every
time they brought in a substantial load of Bone. It was incredible
stuff. Bernie thought that chemical action, some of it relatively
recent, had caused the phenomenon. "Like chalk, you know.
You hardly find it anywhere. Just a few places in England, France,
China and Texas." The kids reported that there was more than
one kind of animal down there, but that all the Bone had the same
rich appearance. They had constructed a new tunnel, with a hidden
entrance, so that even if the building site was blocked to them,
they could still get at the Bone. It seemed to be a huge field,
but most of the Bone was at roughly the same depth. Much of it
had fused and had to be chipped out. They had found no end to
it so far and they had tunneled through more than half an acre
of the dense, dark clay.
Meanwhile I was in Amsterdam and Rio, Paris and Vienna and New
York and Sydney. I was in Tokyo and Seoul and Hong Kong. I was
in Ryadh, Cairo and Baghdad. I was in Kampala and New Benin, everywhere
there were major punters. I racked up so many free airmiles in
a couple of months that they were automatically jumping me to
first class. But I achieved what I wanted. Nobody bought London
Bone without checking with me. I was the acknowledged expert.
The prime source, the best in the business. If you want Bone,
said the art world, you want Gold.
The Serious Fraud Squad became interested in Bone for a while,
but they had been assuming we were faking it and gave up when
it was obviously not rubbish.
Neither Bernie nor I expected it to last any longer than it did.
By the time our first phase of selling was over we were turning
over so much dough it was silly and the kids were getting tired
and were worrying about exploring some of their wildest dreams.
There was almost nothing left, they said. So we closed down the
operation, moved our warehouses a couple of times and then let
the Bone sit there to make us some money while everyone wondered
why it had dried up.
And at that moment, inevitably, and late as ever, the newspapers
caught on to the story. There was a brief late-night TV piece.
A few supplements talked about it in their arts pages. This led
to some news stories and eventually it went to the tabloids and
became anything you liked from the remains of Martians to a new
kind of nuclear waste. Anyone who saw the real stuff was convinced
but everyone had a theory about it. The real exclusive market
was finished. We kept schtum. We were gearing up for the second
phase. We got as far away from our stash as possible.
Of course a few faces tracked me down, but I denied any knowledge
of the Bone. I was a middle-man, I said. I just had good contacts.
Half-a-dozen people claimed to know where the Bone came from.
Of course they talked to the papers. I sat back in satisfied security,
watching the mud swirl over our tracks. Another couple of months
and we'd be even safer than the house I'd bought in Hampstead
overlooking the heath. It had a rather forlorn garden the size
of Kilburn which needed a lot of nurturing. That suited me. I
was ready to retire to the country and a big indoor swimming pool.
By the time a close version of the true story came out, from one
of the stoodies, who'd lost all his share in a lottery syndicate,
it was just one of many. It sounded too dull. I told newspaper
reporters that while I would love to have been involved in such
a lucrative scheme, my money came from theatre tickets. Meanwhile,
Bernie and I thought of our warehouse and said nothing.
Now the stuff was getting into the culture. It was chic. Puncher
used it in their ads. It was called Mammoth Bone by the media.
There was a common story about how a herd had wandered into the
swampy river and drowned in the mud. Lots of pictures dusted off
from the Natural History Museum. Experts explained the colour,
the depths, the markings, the beauty. Models sported a Bone motif.
Our second phase was to put a fair number of inferior fragments
on the market and see how the public responded. That would help
us find our popular price -- the most a customer would pay. We
were looking for a few good millionaires.
Frankly, as I told my partner, I was more than ready to get rid
of the lot. But Bernie counselled me to patience. We had a plan
and it made sense to stick to it.
The trade continued to run well for a while. As the sole source
of the stuff, we could pretty much control everything. Then one
Sunday lunchtime I met Bernie at The Six Jolly Dragoons
in Meard Alley, Soho. He had something to show me, he said. He
didn't even glance around. He put it on the bar in plain daylight.
A small piece of Bone with the remains of decorations still on
it.
"What about it?" I said.
"It's not ours," he said.
My first thought was that the stoodies had opened up the field
again. That they had lied to us when they said it had run out.
"No," said Bernie, "it's not even the same colour.
It's the same stuff -- but different shades. Gerry Goldstein lent
it to me."
"Where did he get it?"
"He was offered it," he said.
We didn't bother to speculate where it had come from. But we did
have rather a lot of our Bone to shift quickly. Against my will,
I made another world tour and sold mostly to other dealers this
time. It was a standard second-wave operation but run rather faster
than was wise. We definitely missed the crest.
However, before deliveries were in and cheques were cashed, Jack
Merrywidow, the fighting MP for Brookgate and E. Holborn, gets
up in the House of Commons on telly one afternoon and asks if
Prime Minister Bland or any of his dope-dazed cabinet understand
that human remains, taken from the hallowed burial grounds of
London, are being sold by the piece in the international market
place? Mr Bland makes a plummy joke enjoyed at Mr Merrywidow's
expense and sits down. But Jack won't give up. They're suddenly
on telly. It's The Struggle of Parliament time. Jack's
had the Bone examined by experts. It's human. Undoubtedly human.
The strange shapes are caused by limbs melting together in soil
heavy with lime. Chemical reactions, he says. We have -- he raises
his eyes to the camera -- been mining mass graves.
A shock to all those who still long for the years of common decency.
Someone, says Jack, is selling more than our heritage. Hasn't
free market capitalism got a little bit out of touch when we start
selling the arms, legs and skulls of our forebears? The torsos
and shoulder-blades of our honourable dead? What did we used to
call people who did that? When was the government going to stop
this trade in corpses?
It's denied.
It's proved.
It looks like trade is about to slump.
I think of framing the cheques as a reminder of the vagaries of
fate and give up any idea of popping the question to my old muse
Little Trudi, who is back on the market, having been dumped by
her corporate suit in a fit, he's told her, of self-disgust after
seeing The Tolstoy Investment with Eddie Izzard. Bernie,
I tell my partner, the Bone business is down the drain. We might
as well bin the stuff we've stockpiled.
Then two days later the TV news reports a vast public interest
in London Bone. Some lordly old queen with four names comes on
the evening news to say how by owning a piece of Bone, you own
London's true history. You become a curator of some ancient ancestor.
He's clearly got a vested interest in the stuff. It's the hottest
tourist item since Jack the Ripper razors and OJ gloves. More
people want to buy it than ever.
The only trouble is, I don't deal in dead people. It is, in fact,
where I have always drawn the line. Even Pratface Charlie wouldn't
sell his great, great grandmother's elbow to some overweight Jap
in a deerstalker and a kilt. I'm faced with a genuine moral dilemma.
I make a decision. I make a promise to myself. I can't got back
on that. I go down to the Italian chippy in Fortess Road, stoke
up on nourishing ritual grease (cod, roe, chips and mushy peas,
bread and butter and tea, syrup pudding), then heave my out of
shape, but mentally prepared, body up onto Parliament Hill to
roll myself a big wacky-baccy fag and let my subconscious think
the problem through.
When I emerge from my reverie, I have looked out over the whole
misty London panorama and considered the city's complex history.
I have thought about the number of dead buried there since, say,
the time of Bodicea, and what they mean to the soil we build on,
the food we still grow here and the air we breath. We are recycling
our ancestors all the time, one way or another. We are sucking
them in and shitting them out. We're eating them. We're drinking
them. We're coughing them up. The dead don't rest. Bits of them
are permanently at work. So what am I doing wrong?
This thought is comforting until my moral sense, sharpening itself
up after a long rest, kicks in with -- but what's different here
is you're flogging the stuff to people who take it home with them.
Back to Wisconsin and California and Peking. You take it out of
circulation. You're dissipating the deep fabric of the city. You're
unravelling something. Like, the real infrastructure, the spiritual
and physical bones of an ancient city...
On Kite Hill I suddenly realise that those bones are in some way
the deep lifestuff of London.
It grows dark over the towers and roofs of the metropolis. I sit
on my bench and roll myself up a further joint. I watch the silver
rising from the river, the deep golden glow of the distant lights,
the plush of the foliage, and as I watch it seems to shred before
my eyes, like a rotten curtain. Even the traffic noise grows fainter.
Is the city sick? Is she expiring? Somehow it seems there's a
little less breath in the old girl. I blame myself. And Bernie.
And those kids.
There and then, on the spot, I renounce all further interest in
the Bone trade. If nobody else will take the relics back, then
I will.
There's no resolve purer than the determination you draw from
a really good reefer.
THREE
So now there isn't a tourist in any London market or antique arcade
who isn't searching out Bone. They know it isn't cheap. They know
they have to pay. And pay they do. Through the nose. And half
of what they buy is crap or fakes. This is a question of status,
not authenticity. As long as we say it's good, they can say it's
good. We give it a provenance, a story, something to colour the
tale to the folks back home. We're honest dealers. We sell only
the authentic stuff. Still they get conned. But still they look.
Still they buy.
Jealous Mancunians and Brummies long for a history old enough
to provide them with Bone. A few of the early settlements, like
Chester and York, start turning up something like it, but it's
not the same. Jim Morrison's remains disappear from Pere La
Chaise. They might be someone else's bones, anyway. Rumour
is they were KFC bones. The revolutionary death-pits fail to deliver
the goods. The French are furious. They accuse the British of
gross materialism and poor taste. Oscar Wilde disappears. George
Eliot. Winston Churchill. You name them. For a few months there
is a grotesque trade in the remains of the famous. But the fashion
has no intrinsic substance and fizzles out. Anyone could have
seen it wouldn't run.
Bone has the image, because Bone really is beautiful.
Too many people are yearning for that Bone. The real stuff. It
genuinely hurts me to disappoint them. Circumstances alter cases.
Against my better judgement I continue in the business. I bend
my principles, just for the duration. We have as much turnover
as we had selling to the Swiss gnomes. It's the latest item on
the beento list. 'You have to bring me back some
London Bone, Ethel, or I'll never forgive you!' It starts to appear
in the American luxury catalogs.
But by now there are ratsniffers everywhere -- from Trade and
Industry, from the National Trust, from the Heritage Corp, from
half-a-dozen South London councils, from the Special Branch, from
the CID, the Inland Revenue and both the Funny and the Serious
Fraud Squads.
Any busybody who ever wanted to put his head under someone else's
bed is having a wonderful time. Having failed dramatically with
the STOP THIS DISGUSTING TRADE approach, the tabloids switch to
offering bits of Bone as prizes in circulation boosters. I sell
a newspaper consortium a Tesco's plastic bagfull for two-and-a-half
mill via a go-between. Bernie and I are getting almost frighteningly
rich. I open some bank accounts off-shore and I became an important
anonymous shareholder in the Queen Elizabeth Hall when it's privatized.
It doesn't take long for the experts to come up with an analysis.
Most of the Bone has been down there since the seventeenth century
and earlier. They are the sites of the old plague pits where legend
had it still living corpses were thrown in with the dead. For
a while it must have seemed like Auschwitz-on-Thames. The chemical
action of lime, partial burning, London clay and decaying flesh,
together with the broadening spread of the London water-table,
thanks to various engineering works over the last century, letting
untreated sewage into the mix, had created our unique London Bone.
As for the decorations, that, it was opined, was the work of the
pit guards, working on earlier bones found on the same site.
"Blood, shit and bone," says Bernie. "It's what
make the world go round. That and money, of course."
"And love," I add. I'm doing all right these days. It's
true what they say about a Roller. Little Trudi has enthusiastically
rediscovered my attractions. She has her eye on a ring. I raise
my glass. "And love, Bernie."
"Fuck that," says Bernie. "Not in my experience."
He's buying Paul McCartney's old place in Wamering and having
it converted for Persians. He has, it is true, also bought his
wife her dream house. She doesn't seem to mind it's on the island
of Las Cascadas about six miles off the coast of Morocco. She's
at last agreed to divorce him. Apart from his mother, she's the
only woman he ever had anything to do with and he isn't, he says,
planning to try another. The only females he wants in his house
in future come with a pedigree a mile long, have all their shots
and can be bought at Harrods.
FOUR
I expect you heard what happened. The private Bonefields, which
contractors were discovering all over South and West London, actually
contained public bones. They were part of our national inheritance.
They had living relatives. And stones, some of them. So it became
a political and a moral issue. The Church got involved. The airwaves
were crowded with concerned clergy. There was the problem of the
self-named bone-miners. Kids, inspired by our leaders' rhetoric,
and aspiring to imitate those great captains of free enterprise
they had been taught to admire, were turning over ordinary graveyards,
which they'd already stripped of their saleable masonry, and digging
up somewhat fresher stiffs than was seemly.
A bit too fresh. It was pointless. The Bone took centuries to
get seasoned and so far nobody had been able to fake the process.
A few of the older graveyards had small deposits of Bone in them.
Brompton Cemetery had a surprising amount, for instance, and so
did Highgate. This attracted prospectors. They used shovels mainly,
but sometimes low explosives. The area around Karl Marx's monument
looked like they'd refought the Russian Civil War over it. The
barbed wire put in after the event hadn't helped. And as usual
the public paid to clean up after private enterprise. Nobody in
their right mind got buried any more. Cremation became very popular.
The borough councils and their financial managers were happy because
more valuable real estate wasn't being occupied by a non-consumer.
It didn't matter how many security guards were posted or, by one
extreme Authority, land-mines, the teenies left no grave unturned.
Bone was still a profitable item, even though the market had settled
down since we started. They dug up Bernie's mother. They dug up
my cousin Leonard. There wasn't a Londoner who didn't have some
intimate unexpectedly back above ground. Every night you saw it
on telly.
It had caught the public imagination. The media had never made
much of the desecrated graveyards, the chiselled-off angels' heads
and the uprooted headstones on sale in King's Road and the Boulevard
St. Michel since the nineteen seventies. These had been the targets
of first generation grave-robbers. Then there had seemed nothing
left to steal. Even they had balked at doing the corpses. Besides,
there wasn't a market. This second generation was making up for
lost time, turning over the soil faster than an earthworm on E.
The news shots became clichés. The heaped earth, the headstone,
the smashed coffin, the hint of the contents, the leader of the
Opposition coming on to say how all this has happened since his
mirror image got elected. The councils argued that they should
be given the authority to deal with the problem. They owned the
graveyards. And also, they reasoned, the Bonefields. The profits
from those fields should rightly go into the public purse. They
could help pay for the Health Service. "Let the dead,"
went their favourite slogan, "pay for the living for a change."
What the local politicians actually meant was that they hoped
to claim the land in the name of the public and then make the
usual profits privatising it. There was a principle at stake.
They had to ensure their friends and not outsiders got the benefit.
The High Court eventually gave the judgement to the public, which
really meant turning it over to some of the most rapacious borough
councils in our history. A decade or so earlier, that Charlie
Peace of elected bodies, the Westminster City Council, had tried
to sell their old graveyards to new developers. This current judgement
allowed all councils at last to maximise their assets from what
was, after all, dead land, completely unable to pay for itself,
and therefore a natural target for privatization. The feeding
frenzy began. It was the closest thing to mass cannibalism I've
ever seen.
We had opened a fronter in Old Sweden Street and had a couple
of halfway presentable slags from Bernie's club taking the calls
and answering enquiries. We were straight up about it. We called
it The City Bone Exchange. The bloke who decorated it and
did the sign specialised in giving offices that long-established
look. He'd created most of those old-fashioned West End Hotels
you'd never heard of until 1999. "If it's got a Scottish
name," he used to say, "it's one of mine. Americans
love the skirl of the pipes, but they trust a bit of brass and
varnish best."
Our place was almost all brass and varnish. And it worked a treat.
The Ritz and the Savoy sent us their best potential buyers. Incredibly
exclusive private hotels gave us taxi-loads of bland-faced American
boy-men, reeking of health and beauty products, bellowing their
credentials to the wind, rich matrons eager for anyone's approval,
massive Germans with aggressive cackles, stern orientals glaring
at us, daring us to cheat them. They bought. And they bought.
And they bought.
The snoopers kept on snooping but there wasn't really much to
find out. Livingstone International took an aggressive interest
in us for a while, but what could they do? We weren't up to anything
illegal just selling the stuff and nobody could identify what
if anything had been nicked anyway. I still had my misgivings.
They weren't anything but superstitions, really. It did seem sometimes
that for every layer of false antiquity, for every act of disneyfication,
an inch or two of our real foundations crumbled. You knew what
happened when you did that to a house. Sooner or later you got
trouble. Sooner or later you had no house.
We had more than our share of private detectives for a while.
They always pretended to be customers and they always looked wrong,
even to our girls. Livingstone International had definitely made
a connection. I think they'd found our mine and guessed what a
windfall they'd lost. They didn't seem at one with themselves
over the matter. They even made veiled threats. There was some
swagger come in to talk about violence but they were spotties
who'd got all their language off old nineties TV shows. So we
sweated it out and the girls took most of the heat. Those girls
really didn't know anything. They were magnificently ignorant.
They had tellies with chips which switch channels as soon as they
detect a news or information programme.
I've always had a rule. If you're caught by the same wave twice,
get out of the water.
While I didn't blame myself for not anticipating the Great Andrew
Lloyd Webber Slump, I think I should have guessed what would happen
next. The tolerance of the public for bullshit had become decidedly
and aggressively negative. It was like the Bone had set new standards
of public aspiration as well as beauty. My dad used to say that
about the Blitz. Classical music enjoyed a huge success during
the Second World War. Everybody grew up at once. The Bone had
made it happen again. It was a bit frightening to those of us
who had always relied on a nice, passive, gullible, greedy punter
for an income.
The bitter fights which had developed over graveyard and Bonefield
rights and boundaries, the eagerness with which some borough councils
exploited their new resource, the unseemly trade in what was,
after all, human remains, the corporate involvement, the incredible
profits, the hypocrisies and politics around the Bone brought
us the outspoken disgust of Europe. We were used to that. In fact,
we tended to cultivate it. But that wasn't the problem.
The problem was that our own public had had enough.
When the elections came round, the voters systematically booted
out anyone who had supported the Bone trade. It was like the sudden
rise of the anti-slavery vote in Lincoln's America. They demanded
an end to the commerce in London Bone. They got the Boneshops
closed down. They got work on the Bonefields stopped. They got
their graveyards and monuments protected and cleaned up. They
got a city which started cultivating peace and security as if
it was a cash crop. Which maybe it was. But it hurt me.
It was the end of my easy money, of course. I'll admit I was glad
it was stopping. It felt like they were slowing entropy, restoring
the past. The quality of life improved. I began to think about
letting a few rooms for company.
The mood of the country swung so far into disapproval of the Bone
trade that I almost began to fear for my life. Road- and anti-abortion
activists switched their attention to Bone merchants. Hampstead
was full of screaming lefties convinced they owned the moral highground
just because they'd paid off their enormous mortgages. Trudi,
after three months, applied for a divorce, arguing that she had
not known my business when she married me. She said she was disgusted.
She said I'd been living on blood-money. The courts awarded her
more than half of what I'd made, but it didn't matter any more.
My investments were such that I couldn't stop earning. Economically,
I was a small oil-producing nation. I had my own international
dialling code. It was horrible in a way. Unless I tried very hard,
it looked like I could never be ruined again. There was no justice.
I met Bernie in The King Lyar in Old Sweden Street, a few
doors down from our burned out office. I told him what I planned
to do and he shrugged.
"We both knew it was dodgy," he told me. "It was
dodgy all along, even when we thought it was mastodons. What it
feels like to me, Ray, is -- it feels like a sort of a massive
transformation of the zeitgeist -- you know, like Virginia
Woolf said about the day human nature changed -- something happens
slowly and you're not aware of it. Everything seems normal. Then
you wake up one morning and -- bingo! -- it's Nazi Germany or
Bolshevik Russia or Thatcherite England or the Golden Age -- and
all the rules have changed."
"Maybe it was the Bone that did it," I said. "Maybe
it was a symbol everyone needed to rally round. You know. A focus."
"Maybe," he said. "Let me know when you're doing
it. I'll give you a hand."
About a week later we got the van backed up to the warehouse loading
bay. It was three o'clock in the morning and I was chilled to
the marrow. Working in silence we transferred every scrap of Bone
to the van. Then we drove back to Hampstead through a freezing
rain.
I don't know why we did it the way we did it. There would have
been easier solutions, I suppose. But behind the high walls of
my big back garden, under the old trees and etiolated rhododendrons,
we dug a pit and filled it with the glowing remains of the ancient
dead.
The stuff was almost phosphorescent as we chucked the big lumps
of clay back on to it. It glowed a rich amber and that faint,
rosemary smell came off it. I can still smell it when I go in
there to this day. My soft fruit is out of this world. The whole
garden's doing wonderfully now.
In fact London's doing wonderfully. We seem to be back on form.
There's still a bit of a Bone trade, of course, but it's marginal.
Every so often I'm tempted to take a spade and turn over the earth
again, to look at the fortune I'm hiding there. To look at the
beauty of it. The strange amber glow never fades and sometimes
I think the decoration on the Bone is an important message I should
perhaps try to decipher.
I'm still a very rich man. Not justly so, but there it is. And,
of course, I'm about as popular with the public as Percy the Paedophile.
Gold the Bone King? I might as well be Gold the Grave Robber.
I don't go down to Soho much. When I do make it to a show or something
I try to disguise myself a bit. I don't see anything of Bernie
any more and I heard two of the stoodies topped themselves.
I do my best to make amends. I'm circulating my profits as fast
as I can. Talent's flooding into London from everywhere, making
a powerful mix. They say they haven't known a buzz like it since
1967. I'm a reliable investor in great new shows. Every year I
back the Iggy Pop Awards, the most prestigious in the business.
But not everybody will take my money. I am regularly reviled.
That's why some organisations receive anonymous donations. They
would refuse them if they knew they were from me.
I've had the extremes of good and bad luck riding this particular
switch in the zeitgeist and the only time I'm happy is when I
wake up in the morning and I've forgotten who I am. It seems I
share a common disgust for myself.
A few dubious customers, however, think I owe them something.
Another bloke, who used to be very rich before he made some frenetic
investments after his career went down the drain, called me the
other day. He knew of my interest in the theatre, that I had invested
in several West End hits. He thought I'd be interested in his
idea. He wanted to revive his first success, Rebecca's Incredibly
Far Out Well or something, which he described as a
powerful religious rock opera guaranteed to capture the new nostalgia
market. The times, he told me, they were a-changin'. His show,
he continued, was full of raw old-fashioned R&B energy. Just
the sort of authentic sound to attract the new no-nonsense youngsters.
Wasn't it cool that Madonna wanted to do the title role? And Bob
Geldof would play the Spirit of the Well. Rock and roll, man!
It's all in the staging, man! Remember the boat in Phantom? I
can make it look better than real. On stage, man, that well is
W.E.T. WET! Rock and roll! I could see that little wizened
fist punching the air in a parody of the vitality he craved and
whose source had always eluded him.
I had to tell him it was a non-starter. I'd turned over a new
leaf, I said. I was taking my ethics seriously.
These days I only deal in living talent.
![](../../../../www.users.zetnet.co.uk/iplus/images/divsmall.gif) © Michael Moorcock 1998, 1999.
This story first appeared in New Worlds, 1998.
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