Chapter 12
          Jean Montafian
         
      
        I had to leave my rifle outside the door when I was shown into a
        small room lit by an oil lamp. The whole place smelled of lamp
        oil. Sitting behind a wooden desk was a man with a round face.
        He nodded towards an old chair. ‘I’m Jean Montafian, please sit
        down.’ He spoke with a trace of some foreign accent. Queenie and
        I sat down. He peered at me long enough for it to become
        uncomfortable.
        
        He looked like an uncle. The skin of his puffy face was pale
        with fine wrinkles like cling wrap. He was wearing a striped
        double-breasted jacket—like in a 1930s gangster film—a
        cream-coloured shirt and a blue bow tie. Weird.
        
        He looked at me, then he took off his glasses and looked at them
        pensively, then looked at me again full beam and said, ‘So
        you’re James Walters, the computer man?’ Maybe the accent was
        French.
        ‘Yes, I am. Pleased to meet you Mr. Montafian. What can I do for
        you?’ Spoken like a true toady.
        ‘I’ve a problem you may be able to solve for me. I’ve
        accumulated much gold here. I have a team. We enter all the bank
        vaults. They call us the Gnomes of Paris. Gold is the only thing
        that has not decayed. I need to monetise it. Listen now, and
        understand’
        ‘Yes, sir.’
        ‘I need to monetise that gold, and I want you to find a way.
        Start thinking it over once I have explained.’
        I politely nod-blinked in acquiescence.
        ‘What I have here is security. Through the tunnels, we can move
        unseen to almost anywhere in Paris. We have a complete network
        of unsleeping watchers. We picked up you and your stupid dog
        from the moment you entered Parc Montsouris. We have modern
        weapons, not like that museum piece of yours. We are ready to
        use them. Every window and manhole is a firing position. Paris
        belongs to us. We let no one enter unless we want them in. A
        regiment of tanks couldn’t dislodge us, nor divisions of
        infantry. And we offer no targets to aviation. Britiniacum and
        their pathetic flying bombs. Ha! Very little real effect on
        London during the Blitz, as the history books tell us. No, we
        are as safe here as anywhere in the world.’ 
        
        He paused.
        
        ‘And if we were not safe here, what use would the gold be to us?
        Do you see what I’m getting at?’
        ‘Er, you have gold stashed away safe and you want to monetise
        it, right?’ Intrigued, I prompted him, hoping he would soon get
        to the point. It also occurred to me that if someone did want to
        dislodge him it would need to be by guile, infiltration,
        betrayal.
        ‘Correct,’ he went on. ‘Gold in the ground is of no use. I want
        to link it to Cryptocoins or something and make it a universal
        currency.’ Big plans, the man! Better humour him for now.
        Cryptocoins were OK, but they could go up and down unexpectedly,
        and they might even be cracked by a clever hacker and disappear.
        The thing was that Cryptocoins, or whatever, totally depended on
        how trustworthy the scheme looked to everyone, and Crypto coins
        were dodgy. They were basically a hot-protato currency that
        nobody wanted to hold for long. 
        
        I was thinking that it might be possible to devise a blockchain
        system where there would be a small tax on every transaction
        that would cover the cost of gold security. I had read of a
        scheme that had been proposed before The Virus for value-added
        tax. The idea was to have traders subscribe to a blockchain
        system that recorded every buying and selling transaction they
        made, applied a flat tax percentage and automatically paid the
        difference to the state every month. That was the clever thing
        about a value-added tax: a seller had an incentive to issue an
        invoice for every transaction so that he could get the tax back,
        otherwise he would be paying the buyer’s tax for him—a supremely
        sly system. Meanwhile, Montafian was going on…
        
        ‘I plan to mint five-gram gold coins and issue certificates for
        them. Do you think that would work? Can you do that for me?’ I
        thought that I probably could. However, there were two problems.
        First, would the users like his system and want to participate?
        Not that there wasn’t a need for a more reliable currency but
        how was he going to generate the necessary trust? This led to
        the second point: trust between him and me. How was he going to
        make sure that I didn’t put some backdoor into the system and
        empty it of cash later? And how was I going to trust him to pay
        me and not just eliminate me when the project was completed?
        Well, he had a plan for that.
        
        ‘This is how I’m thinking of arranging things between us. I’m
        offering you twenty kilos of gold in coin for this job, that’s
        about one million Cryptocoins at present rates, but the gold
        coins will stay here with all the others. You will just get the
        certificates. How does that sound?’
        It was definitely enough to get a new body for Anna, so I said,
        ‘Twenty kilos, eh? I have an idea and I believe I can do it. Can
        you give me a bit of time to think things over?’
        
        He replied, ‘I can give you until this evening to come up with a
        plan. You have to stay here now, and I advise you not to try and
        do a runner, or I’ll set Fat Freddy on you. I think you two have
        met; he showed you in. He is very tenacious, you know, and will
        do anything for a bonus.’ He got up. He was wearing a suit with
        matching trousers and brown leather shoes polished like conkers.
        He continued, ‘Out you go; we will now walk over to our secret
        base.’ “Secret base”, a childish notion. Was he serious or
        ironic? very smart or very crazy? Anyway, Fat Freddy was waiting
        for us outside and said, ‘I’ll be carrying your gun, squire, now
        take it easy and give me that knife too.’ I was going to say
        “What knife?” but thought better of it when he sort of smirked
        and pointed at my sleeve. Queenie didn’t like the look of him at
        all. With Montafian leading the way with a miner’s lamp and Fat
        Freddy behind on guard duty, we began weaving our way through
        tunnels lined with stacks of human bones.
        
        After a while, we came to a heavy iron door set in concrete.
        Montafian had the key and after a bit of jangling and creaking,
        we passed through. Then it was carefully locked again behind us.
        The tunnel was now concrete-lined with mysterious cables and
        pipes hanging from the ceiling. It seemed that my future was now
        definitely in front of me and that there would be no going back.
        The tunnel went on and on. But it was now lit by dim electric
        lights spaced well apart, which meant that there was a generator
        somewhere and therefore a source of fuel: civilisation.
        
        After what seemed a long walk, we got to a sort of guard station
        with an armed man on duty. He was expecting us and saluted
        Montafian, who returned the salute and said, ‘Carry on, guard.’
        After passing through another iron door, we entered a hall with
        light streaming through high windows. Montafian turned to Fat
        Freddy. ‘Get him a room, check in his gear and issue him a mess
        card. I’ll see you later, after assembly.’ He turned to me.
        ‘Freddy will settle you in. Do what he says. I will see you
        after assembly at sixteen thirty hours. Have a meal, a shower
        and a rest before then. Go now.’ I was clearly dismissed.
        
        With Fat Freddy leading the way, it was off to a nearby counter
        where a surly clerk exchanged my rifle and knife for a token.
        Then over to another counter where a young woman gave me a room
        card and a mess card. At this, Freddy gave a sort of snort,
        nodded, told her to look after me and nipped off, duty
        accomplished.
        
        I turned to the woman and said, ‘I’ve just arrived, where
        exactly are we?’ 
        ‘Oh, nice to meet you. This is La Santé Prison complex…didn’t
        you know? We have our main base here. It’s nice.’ She gave me a
        coquettish smile. ‘Why don’t you go find your room, it’s on the
        second floor, clean up and have a nice rest? At twelve hundred
        hours you can go to the mess and get lunch. After that you can
        have a nice nap in your room. Assembly’s at sixteen thirty…What
        a nice dog! Come back later for a nice chat, eh? Your name is
        James, right? I’m Sarah. Take the stairs over there to your
        floor and back down for the mess later, okay?’
        
        I looked round, spotted the stairs and went up to the second
        floor. The place was wide and echoey with offstage clangings,
        bangings and heavy footsteps: prison ambience. I clumped down a
        long corridor with hard, ugly floor tiles and let myself in. The
        whole place smelt of some kind of cleaning product or
        disinfectant. It was a sort of basic apartment that had once
        been a cell. There was a sink with running water, so I filled a
        bowl and set it on the floor for Queenie. She had been looking
        apprehensive but now seemed to relax a bit. Me too.
        
        Thinking about Montafian’s offer, I realised it was one that I
        couldn’t really refuse. I was actually in a prison now, although
        a repurposed one. I looked at my communicator: nearly eleven. I
        topped it up with a little alcohol: just to give myself
        something to do. I unpacked some clean clothes and entered the
        bathroom closet, hoping that Queenie was house trained.
        
        When I came out refreshed and shaved, to my relief Queenie was
        quietly dozing on the floor. I wondered whether I could take her
        for a walk outside. I thought it would be good to have a look
        round too, so I collected a few things but left the high-tech
        smock Edward had given me, stepped out, locked the door and
        sneaked out with Queenie—back along the corridor down the wide
        stairs to the spacious hall where encouraging beams of sunshine
        shone down from high unbroken windows: very orderly and
        comfortable. Sarah was still on duty, so I walked up with an
        engaging smile and asked her how to get outside. She swung her
        shoulders slightly, smiled and pointed to the door. I told her
        that she was most helpful, kind, obliging, friendly, gracious
        and courteous (the full thesaurus treatment) and made for the
        main door.
        
        Outside, the strong spring sunshine took me full in the face. On
        unscrewing my eyes, I found myself in a courtyard containing
        buildings bounded by a high wall. Queenie ran free and found a
        place to do her business. I wandered over to the monumental gate
        to the outside and reflected that this was a different world
        inside the walls, a place where you could be comfortable and
        safe—most Deva-ish. I made a circuit of the walls with an
        excited Queenie scampering across paved areas, between flower
        beds and planters, in front of grim six-story blocks and past
        the odd armed guard. By the time I had got back to where I
        started, it was nearly twelve, and feeling distinctly hungry, I
        went into the main hall again and followed the signs to the
        “mess”.
        
        The mess turned out to be a large self-service canteen and
        coffee lounge with an enticing collective-cooking smell:
        promising. We joined the queue, stainless steel tray in hand,
        flashed the mess card and took our turn at the serving station.
        Into the recesses on my tray were deposited, at my request,
        three smooth orange-brown sausages, two dollops of refried
        beans, a heap of a steamed leaf vegetable and, in another
        recess, two of last-year’s apples (a bit wrinkled but sweet and
        sound), together with two chunks of French bread. Copious,
        standard stuff. I found a place to sit, fumbled for the cutlery
        and tucked in with a sigh of contentment. I ate slowly, looking
        around me. 
        
        About a third of the places were occupied: men and women, some
        alone, some in small groups. Everybody looked animated and
        high-spirited, happy to be safe and well fed in this “secret
        base”. Quite a few were wearing uniforms like the guards
        outside—jackets and trousers in what Edward called “urban camo”.
        I was rather impressed with what Montafian (if he really was in
        charge) had managed to achieve here. And I wondered where the
        food, water and all the rest had come from. Clearly there could
        be no production in the ruins of Paris and the old food stocks
        were long gone. I guessed it must have been brought in through
        tunnels, which could hardly have been easy.
        
        When I’d had enough, I put the tray on the floor for Queenie to
        finish. I looked around and saw Sarah eating with a colleague.
        She spotted me looking and gave me a nod. Then it was chair back
        and tray to trolley. Another glance at Sarah and off to my room
        with Queenie trotting alongside and licking her mouth.
        
        When I got inside my room, I realised that I felt tired and that
        I had an empty afternoon until four thirty. I set my
        communicator’s alarm for four, pulled my boots off and flopped
        down on the bed. The bed was clean and comfortable. I stretched
        out and closed my eyes. It struck me that if this was a “secret
        base”, then they would hardly let me out any time soon. Still,
        it seemed to me that this place was probably my best option
        anyway. A lot better than joining the pig-raising community… I
        decided that I would do my best to make Montafian’s project a
        success. I was determined to find the money to get a new body
        for Anna. Suddenly, it all came back to me—how much I missed
        her. Feeling sorry for myself, I drifted off to sleep.
        
        When my communicator buzzed I awoke from a dreamless sleep with
        Queenie peering quizzically at me. Time to nip down for her walk
        before assembly at four thirty. She had a quick run then it was
        back in the main hall and following the signage to the assembly
        hall, which turned out to be a low-ceilinged, quarry-tiled
        car-park sort of area with bare concrete columns. There was a
        rough wooden dais at the back. 
        
        As I came in, following the general flow of people, the man at
        the entrance called out, ‘Hey, you’re new here aren’t you?
        What’s your mess number?’ I nearly said “What mess?” wondering
        if he was referring to Queenie. Then I realised what he meant
        and meekly showed him my mess card.
        ‘Glad to have you with us, Engineer Walters.’
        ‘Er, yeah.’
        ‘You’re in Squad B; that would be Rank 2, Man 3.
        Engineer Musgrave, the tall guy, is the right marker.
        Please carry on, sir.’
        Apparently, I was in the army now. So I carried on.
        I turned to a man near me and said, ‘Where’s Squad B?’
        ‘Over there’—he waved vaguely—‘it’s marked on the floor,’ he
        said then wandered off.
        
        The floor was well-provided with painted markings. I soon found
        the part marked “Squad B”. A particularly tall individual
        who I assumed to be right-marker Musgrave was standing on the
        front right-hand corner of a sort of rectangle and some other
        people were milling around him. I sneaked up to the edge of the
        group. 
        There was something of a hush then a flurry of footsteps down
        the side of the assembly hall. Finally, Montafian and three
        aides stepped up onto the dais in front of us. The show was
        about to begin.
        One of the aides, the beefy one, took a step forward and
        bellowed, ‘Century 3, GET on paRADE!’
        
        At this everybody started shuffling about to get in line. I
        found my position without difficulty (Rank 2, Man 3).
        When everyone was in position. He shouted, ‘Century 3,
        SHUN!’ At which we all had to stand on our appointed spots with
        our feet together and our arms by our sides.
        
        Then he shouted, ‘Century 3, staaand EASY!’ Everyone moved
        their feet slightly apart and put their hands behind their
        backs.
        All this was quite easy to pick up. Queenie thought it was good
        fun.
        Montafian stood in front of us on the dais, staring at the
        ceiling, motionless, seeking inspiration, as it were, or
        possibly trying to stifle a fart.
        
        He nodded to the shouter who said, ‘Duplicarii take the roll
        call. Carry on.’ It seemed that I had inadvertently joined the
        Roman army.
        Out stepped the Duplicarii with their clipboards who proceeded
        to read off our names. When our name was called we had to yell
        “Present Duplicarius!” So I did too.
        
        When the yelling stopped, Montafian nodded to the shouter again.
        He picked up a clipboard and began reading off news and orders.
        This was all boring stuff that didn’t apparently concern me, but
        at one point he yelled, ‘Engineer Walters shall report to
        Room 603 at seventeen thirty hours!’ I had my orders.
        
        Once all this was finished, it was “Century 3, SHUN” again:
        we all shuffled to attention then “Century 3, diss-MISS”,
        and we all trooped out.
        
        I looked at the others for signs of grumbling and
        dissatisfaction: none. They all seemed high-spirited and keen:
        clever old Montafian! So it was back to the main hall then
        outside. Queenie scampered around a bit and made herself popular
        with the personnel. I stood waiting for the time to report to
        Room 603. It was like waiting for a dental appointment. I
        watched the time on my communicator. When it was a quarter to
        five, I called Queenie and set off for Room 603.
        
        Room 603 was on the top floor, a trudge up the stairs. The
        corridor seemed identical in look and smell to mine. I soon
        found the place and knocked on the door. A voice shouted,
        ‘Come!’ I went in. It was a good-sized room with a big window at
        the back looking out over the old prison wall onto decaying
        roofs of the buildings of Paris. This appeared to be a waiting
        room with a row of chairs and an assistant behind a desk near a
        door to another room. Definitely a going-to-see-the-dentist feel
        about it. The assistant was a young man with red hair in the
        ubiquitous urban camo. He stood up, smiled and held out his hand
        to shake. I took his hand and the handshake was neither flabby
        nor squeezy, which was a relief.
        
        ‘Sir Montafian will receive you in a minute; please take a
        seat.’
        So it was “Sir” now. Duly noted. He seemed friendly, so I
        decided to take a chair near his desk and try to get some
        information out of him.
        ‘I’ve just arrived. Is this the old La Santé Prison building?
        Why have you occupied it?’
        ‘Yes it is. It has a solid wall right round it, plenty of space.
        And it was in great condition, built to last. Another thing, it
        connects to he local tunnels. There are great many tunnels in
        this area.’
        ‘How long have you been occupying this place?’
        ‘Years. Look, if you want more information, you will have to ask
        the Old Man himself. Don’t worry, he’ll be free soon.’ 
        
        So that’s what they called him. I sat back and took my
        communicator out. Then I became aware that someone was shouting
        behind the door. Then an almighty shout of ‘Do I make myself
        clear?’ and a confused shuffling. Mr Helpful was nodding to me
        as if to say this was normal and not to be alarmed. But I was. I
        was stuck here at his mercy with no way back and nowhere to go
        back to. The door opened and an urban camo came out looking
        upset and emotional. 
        Mr Helpful sent him on his way him by pointing to the exit. He
        turned to me unfazed and with a friendly smile said, ‘I’ll see
        if he’s ready to receive you now, went into the inner office and
        closed the door behind him. Something was said, the door opened
        again and he nodded and beckoned. This was it. I went in, and
        the door was closed behind me.
        
      
       written by
          Perseus Slade