London Story – Chapter 3

The London Gutter

London’s muck – on the hour, every hour.

27th July 2012, 1000

MISS ME, HARDLY: NELSON’S COLUMN FALLS

Nelson’s been torn down from his column, just missing a lucky commuter.

Bob Benjamin, 34, had his day interrupted by Lord Nelson falling right in front of him.

Close one, that.,” he commented, before heading off to work. “Nearly made me late.”

And it’s bad timing, with the Olympic Opening Ceremony tonight.

Before losing an epic battle you’d always get a bad omen,” said a man with a grinning picture of Jesus on his shirt. “Shooting stars, flashes of light, avalanches, stuff like that. This is ours.”

Maybe we’re not gonna win many golds over the next fortnight,” he finished.

Not everyone minds Nelson coming down, though.

This is it. This is the system falling down. Someone’s putting an end to the bad guys. I’m all for it,” said a man in fake army uniform.

No-one’s confirmed who it was that brought Nelson down. Witnesses report seeing a tiny man in a three-cornered hat wrestling with the statue, but they’re probably mental.

In other news

TfL release pics of Commuter Cheat – see inside!

It’s Raining! Celebs get their coats!

Opening Ceremony On Ice: athletes still giving the cold shoulder to pay deal

Sonnet Friday at the Globe, for all you culture vultures!

Explore Switzerland! Head down to Southwark Cathedral for quality Swiss merchandise!

This Hour’s Weather

Chance of rain: yes

Want more gutter press? Follow us on Twitter, just like we follow you!


The man holding the statue always liked his shirts too big.

They never quite hampered his movement – at least, they never tangled his legs, although they did sometimes catch his hands as they elucidated his diction – but Montgomery’s shirts always threatened a trip or two as he trod the boards. Today was no exception. Spectators in the Globe’s lower seats watched the shirt flutter as Montgomery stared, quite obediently, into the gathering crowd, shirt flapping, a great white flag of surrender.

Ladies and gentlemen,” he declared. He considered saying it again in a different language, but he wasn’t entirely sure he could. He had trained for Chekhov, not for compeering. His shirt – and arms – flapped some more.

Ladies, gentleman, welcome to Sonnet Friday at the Globe!”

He paused for cheers. There were two.

Shakespeare’s sonnets in 47 languages! And which, pray tell me, will win?”

He cupped a hand to his ear, as if listening at the door for Desdemona.

Russian!” someone shouted, presumably from Russia. They waved a Russian flag wildly, just to reinforce their point.

Russian!?” Montgomery repeated, challenging the audience.

England!” shrieked an excited little girl. Her mother beamed proudly.

Dutch!” Half the audience were in orange.

Swahili!” shouted the little girl again, evidently forgetting her previous prediction. She had recently watched The Lion King.

Montgomery spread his arms wide again, winching his smile. He loved acting. Today the Globe looked more unreal than ever, a half-forgotten toy left behind by a wayward child, tipped slightly on one side. Doll faces stared at him from fragile wood.

We’ll see if you’re right! 47 languages, only one winner. A representative of each language will walk out and read one of Shakespeare’s sonnets – William Shakespeare, our very own bard in residence here at the Globe – and you’ll vote on your favourites online. We’re broadcasting this all over the world – hello, Asia, Africa and the rest! – so everyone gets a chance to play! Are you ready for your first contestant?”

Yes!”

Okay then. Please welcome-” he checked his notes- “Italy! Italy, ladies and gentlemen.”

He made a mental note to find a translation for ‘ladies and gentlemen’. Montgomery strode backwards off the stage, clapping, catching his arms in his shirt, and turning to clap the contestant.

And on walked Lara, wearing a fake moustache.

Alicia and the bobble hat were looking for a disguise. The ticket inspectors would be quick, they knew, with the picture out in the paper. Too quick to run, said the bobble hat, changing her mind. They would have to find a disguise for Alicia.

Sure enough, around the corner came an inspector, kitted out in an orange-breasted jacket and black, clumpy waterproof trousers.

There was no way Alicia was going to stick around for the inspector’s penalty fare. Of a like mind, she and the bobble hat dived into the protest town below St Paul’s, as two songbirds, upon hearing the paisley mewings of an orange household cat, might swoop to the hidden branches of a garden tree.

The orange jacket disappeared from view, but still lurked somewhere, looking for them. The bobble hat was alert to opportunities.

They’re all in the big tent,” she gestured. They could hear voices squabbling. “Let’s find you a disguise.”

The two fugitives ruffled open a flimsy tent, to find a grimy sleeping bag scrunched up like a rock. Alicia took hold of the bag with the tips of her fingers and lifted it, peeking beneath, half-expecting to find ants under the tarpaulin rock. What she found was very different.

Army uniforms!” she exclaimed, “Fake army uniforms.”

Folded neatly, surprisingly so, given the state of the tent, were two khaki fighting suits. Where a regimental symbol would normally be, there was a turtle.

Nice turtle.”

Thanks.”

Bobble hat spied a small tub of paint – essential protest gear, paint – on the floor, and rubbed her hands together briskly. “Okay then, Alicia, let’s-”

How do you know my name?”

I borrowed your travelcard.”

You’ve still got it. Give it back.”

Not yet. We need to get out of trouble first. Now-”

We’re not going anywhere until I get my travelcard back,” Alicia interrupted. She’d had just about enough of this.

Alicia, there’s no time for games. We have to get out of here-”

We don’t have to do anything. You have to get out of here. I can stay as long as I like.”

You’re being chased by the ticket inspectors!”

Who will find me, and it will all turn out to be a big misunderstanding because someone stole my travelcard,” Alicia pulled the note out of her pocket and waved it threateningly in the air. She wished she thought of this earlier, but, then again, she only found the note after leaving Tower Gateway.

Give me the note.”

No.”

Note.”

No.”

Note!”

You’re not getting the note, Bobble Hat, until I get my travelcard. And your name.”

You’re not getting your travelcard until I get my note.”

Deal. And your name.”

Bobble Hat folded her arms and stared at Alicia for a second.

Why haven’t you gone already?”

What?”

Alicia, why haven’t you already gone back to the ticket inspectors? You found the note – eventually – so why didn’t you just hand it in, say it had all been a big mistake, and that someone had nicked it?”

I wanted my travelcard back. I wanted to find out who’d got it.”

Fair enough, I suppose – at first. But now you’re here, you’ve found out who’s got your travelcard, you could identify me. Why are you hiding now? Why didn’t you just walk up to that orange numpty with your sick-note?”

I wanted my travelcard back,” Alicia repeated, a little less certain.

But you’d have got it back then, or at least, it would have been replaced. They’d have accepted your story, you could have gone to work as usual, got on with it. But no, you decided to run with the fugitive. Why is that?”

Before Alicia could think up a response, the hat continued.

I’ll tell you why. It’s because you want the chase. You want something a bit different today. Or maybe you cared a bit about the fugitive, on the run from the law. Either way, you’re not with the inspectors. You’re a rebel, kid.”

The bobble hat didn’t really look like a rebel herself, thought Alicia.

And you can’t really run now,” the hat continued, “You’ve done what the note said, you’ve hidden from TfL with the girl who wrote it, and you’ve broken into a tent.”

Alicia frowned.

I’m not backing down. One – travelcard. Two – your name.”

Okay,” Bobble Hat smiled for the first time, “But here are my demands. One – I want the note back. Two – you put on the face paint on and come with me. I’ll explain as we go.”

Deal.” Alicia didn’t smile back.

In the Olympic Village a Swiss canoeist wasn’t smiling, or making any facial expression at all. Part of the plan. The athletes had been squabbling over the leadership election for some time, and the Swiss group were keeping mum, staying out of it.

So we’re agreed on a neutral leader,” summarised a tennis player. “What about one of the Swedes?”

No-one could find the Swedes.

The Swiss! Everyone knows the Swiss are neutral.” All eyes turned to the Swiss canoeist who, being number 43 in the world at canoeing in a straight line, wasn’t used to all eyes turning to him. Nevertheless, he stayed completely still, unmoved, the very image of neutrality.

Look at that, the Neutral Man. He doesn’t even have a facial expression. All in favour of this guy being leader?”

Roughly three-quarters of the group yelled “Aye.”

Agreed!”

Stage One of the Plan was complete.

Lara, having left the stage, was removing her moustache. The Italian sonnet had gone pretty well, not that it mattered. It wasn’t as if she had any competition.

Ladies and gentlemen! Or should I say, signore e signori?”

What Montgomery didn’t know was that he’d mispronounced it, and had actually said ‘Ladies and ladies’. An Italian gentleman in the upper tiers looked a bit left out.

Now,” Montgomery continued, knowing he was supposed to get the crowd going, “Where are we all from?”

Kidderminster!”

Kidderminster! Nice part of the world!”

Milton Keynes!”

Bromley!”

This wasn’t having the desired effect. Montgomery changed tack.

Who’s come the furthest?” He pointed to the person with the Russian flag. “Russia? Is that the furthest?”

Actually, I live in Bromley too,” said the Russian. Montgomery inwardly cursed Bromley and all its kind.

So Kidderminster’s the furthest so far…” he gestured to a family waving a gigantic Finnish flag. “Where have you come from?”

The father of the family, who had unwisely shaved his beard in preparation for a day of sightseeing, gave a contemptuous stare back. “Finland.”

Finland!” That was more like it, thought Montgomery. “Anyone further than Finland?” There was a cough from behind the stage, signalling Montgomery to get on with it.

Lara, behind the stage, had quickly removed her disguise. It was German next, and then Florian was competing for French. She heard the compère call her, and strode back to her stage.

Whaltherh, striding down Haymarket, had been having a quiet morning. He liked to stride everywhere he went, pretending to be in a hurry, as if he had someplace to be, like the rest of this city. In reality, Whalterh had been dreaming up schemes, trying to think of a way to be part of his world. Haymarket. Maybe he could turn things into hay markets. Ay markets – no, they weren’t things. Whitehall was round the corner. He could turn all whites into white halls. No, that wasn’t particularly lucrative.

It is fair to say that Whalterh had never considered doing anything that didn’t involve adding the letter ‘h’ to things. He hadn’t tried very hard at school, and hadn’t really got on with the other kids. When they played ‘It’ in the playground he would inevitably be told off for hitting other children. In those days he thought that adding a letter to things would make him rich and famous, but nothing ever turned out that way.

It was in the midst of these woes that a horse suddenly appeared in front of Whaltherh.

It was Mr Curble’s horse, of course, accompanied by Mr Curble, although Whaltherh didn’t notice him at first.

Excuse me,” Mr Curble said to the stranger, “I’m looking for the hay market.”

Upon escaping the meeting, Mr Curble had decided to get rid of the horse once and for all. Hearing that there was a hay market somewhere around the place, he had gone looking for it, hoping to leave the horse there.

This is Haymarket,” replied Whaltherh, helpfully.

I don’t see a market. Or hay,” Mr Curble sniffed, “I need it for this horse.”

Whaltherh put him right. “Oh, there’s no actual market here, or hay. The street’s just called Haymarket.”

Well, that won’t do. Why call a street Haymarket if there isn’t a hay market?” Mr Curble wasn’t pleased. He’d walked all the way up Whitehall and round the corner, apologizing to everyone he met for the invisible horse they kept walking into, and now there wasn’t even any hay.

I could make you some hay?” Whaltherh suggested, “Do you have any ay? Ya? Actually, maybe I can’t make any hay.”

What on earth are you talking about? I’ve got important business to attend to, as soon as I’ve got rid of this horse, and you’re just gibbering.”

I’m sorry, I can add the letter ‘h’ to things. If there was something called an ay, I could add an ‘h’ to it, and you’d have some hay. For your horse.”

You can add the letter ‘h’ to things to make new things?”

Yes.”

Mr Curble thought for a moment. “That’s not very useful.”

No. It gets in the way sometimes. For example, I’m banned from ever crossing the Severn Bridge. I don’t think whales live very long in the Irish Sea.”

No.” Mr Curble considered this for a moment, before remembering better things to think about. There were jobs to done, and none of them concerned this madman. “Well, thank you for enlightening me. I must be off. Business to attend to.”

He started to walk, but Whaltherh held him back for a moment. “Have an ‘h’ anyway. Never know, might help.” Whaltherh proffered his hand. Mr Curble, that immaculate English gentleman, shook it, more out of habit than politeness.

That was the last of Mr Curble. He had acquired an ‘h’, and suddenly the most extraordinary thing happened.

Alicia looked pretty extraordinary. Three lines of paint smeared down the sides of her face – yellow paint, inexplicably, was the only colour to be found in the tent – and a baggy, turtle-crested khaki suit tripped her with every step, making her look like a stumbling canary. The Bobble Hat – or Poppy, as it turned out – was explaining what they were going to do.

We’re going to commandeer a tank.”

A tank?” Alicia assumed she’d misheard.

Why not? We’re dressed for it.”

In a sense, Poppy was right. They were dressed for it. Poppy had also chosen to nick a pretend army uniform and some face-paint, and now the two of them marched along the road, slightly at ease, awaiting further orders. As Poppy expected, passers-by were ignoring them, unable to recognise Alicia through the sticky yellow paint and oversized overalls.

But, a tank? Aren’t we supposed to be hiding from the authorities? They’re bound to notice a tank!” Alicia said.

We’ve got to stop the invasion somehow.”

And where are we going to find a tank? They’re not just lying around Central London, you know-” Alicia stopped, suddenly processing Poppy’s words, “Invasion?”

Poppy was mental. She knew Poppy was mental. She should never had listened. Maybe this was going to turn out to be one of those internet scams, or something on a telly programme about psychological tricks.

The Swiss invasion. That’s why I’m in the centre today. I nicked your travelcard to come stop an invasion.”

Alicia knew she should have gone to work.

Poppy continued, “Yeah, they hate the Summer Olympics, all the coverage it gets. They’re plotting to turn it into a massive Winter Olympics, make skiing the most prestigious sporting event there is. And we’re going to stop them. With a tank.”

Her companion – or captive, depending on how you looked at it – didn’t look so sure.

How do you know all this?” Don’t raise your voice. Don’t upset the madwoman.

I listen in on all these things. I’m connected. I’m on the internet,” seeing Alicia’s face, she searched for more proof. “If there’s no invasion, then how do you explain this?”

She unfolded the copy of the London Gutter she’d taken from the St Paul’s seller and opened it out. Half the pages were adverts for Swiss holidays, Swiss watches, Salopettes. “Look, they’ve got a Switzerland area opening outside Southwark Cathedral today, advertising Swiss products. And it’s the day of Sonnet Friday.”

What’s Sonnet Friday got to do with it?”

The Swiss speak all the languages, don’t they? Have you ever been on a Swiss train? The announcements are in French, German, Italian and English! They could speak all the sonnets in all the languages, and take over the very culture London is built on. We have to stop them, and the only way is to drive across the river in a giant tank. I’ll be the general, you can drive the thing.”

Whaltherh stood dazedly, stuck in a glue of awe and deep comprehension, staring at the general. Even for a man who is used to adding the letter ‘h’ to things and making therm something else, this was a new one.

What… who are you?”

Who am I? How dare you, peasant! Out of my way!” Whatever the middle-aged man had become, he certainly enjoyed shouting.

The new arrival wore a dark military coat, the stiff, regimental kind from the colonial era. His accent was thickly Germanic, and he had a crazed look in his eyes, lost in fires far away. Realizing that Whaltherh really didn’t recognize him, he stood to full height.

I am general Gerhard von Blucher. And you, peasant-” General Blucher remembered how useful Whaltherh had been to him, and suddenly had a strategy, just like a good General should, “Will obey my orders. Go to a florists immediately, and bring me back all the flowers you can find.”

Flowers?”

Do not question my orders! Flowers, now!”

Whaltherh ran as fast as his legs could go. Blucher, the soul of a Prussian hero released from the flimsy civil-service body of Gerry Curble, leapt on his magical horse, which neighed with delight.

Onward, horse! Let us scout this great city.” And with that horse and rider galloped round the corner, finding themselves in a great square.

Napoleon, having defeated Admiral Nelson by chucking him off his column, was in Trafalgar Square, quietly enjoying the scenery. Some pigeons flew around his head, considering a perch on the great Emperor, but none could quite bring themselves to sit on His Imperial Majesty. Napoleon was in fine temper. With Wellington and Nelson defeated, there was little to stop him now. He had two choices: go back to the National Portrait Gallery and snooze for a while – it was his retirement, after all, and he could sleep as much as he liked – or take over the known world again. Not an easy decision, and not one to be made lightly. He hadn’t really expected things to be so easy, truth be told.

It was at that moment he realised things weren’t going to be so easy. Round the corner, flying through the air on the back of a magical steed, came his third nemesis, Count Gerhard von Blucher, conqueror of Waterloo. This was not in the script.

Blucher, on his part, was surprised to see Napoleon. Especially a Napoleon so small, and so inexpertly crafted from canvas. He flew towards the Emperor, horse stopping on the ground next to the Emperor, in full of the steps and pillars of the looming National Gallery.

Of course history would repeat itself. Just when Nelson was defeated, when Wellington had been sent packing, Blucher shows up, Napoleon thought. He stared contemptuously at his Prussian foe. Rainbows shot out of the horse’s arse.

The foes caught each other’s eyes, smiling. There was the clink of cutlasses, the flash of tourist cameras, and the duel commenced.

London Story – chapter 2

Chapter Two – 9 am

The London Gutter

London’s muck – on the hour, every hour.

27th July 2012, 0900

COMMUTER CHEAT WILL PAY

This morning a woman cheated London.

The Olympics celebrate fair play. One commuter didn’t play fair.

Even if the athletes get back on track after their pay tiff, London will still remember the actions of one commuter this morning, who didn’t pay for her train ticket.

The cheat was caught on camera, running from ticket inspectors at Tower Gateway station.

We don’t get out of bed and go to work each day for someone else to scrounge off the rest of us,” one man said, before asking what the story was.

Running like that, she ought to be in the 100 metres tomorrow! Amazing speed.” an outraged bystander said.

Transport For London, the company which runs London’s trains, has promised to make the footage public, so that members of the public can help search for the commuter cheat.

Once we catch up with her, she’ll be for the high jump,” a TfL spokesperson pledged.

In other news

It’s Raining! Celebs get their coats!

Opening Ceremony On Ice: athletes still giving the cold shoulder to pay deal

22 Signs That Your Spouse Is Late For Work

Sonnet Friday at the Globe starts at 10am, for all you culture vultures!

This Hour’s Weather

Chance of rain: 264.3%

Want more gutter press? Follow us on Twitter, just like we follow you!


The rag was right: it was raining, impossibly so. Napoleon stood atop the steps of the National Gallery, London’s pillared temple, surveying Trafalgar Square below. It might have been two centuries since Napoleon last surveyed a seething tide of sailors, but little had really changed. Rain fell hard, fast. Suited Londoners scurried from cover to cover, midshipmen in a naval battle, hiding behind bulk, umbrellas tugged above, navy blue against the cobalt sea of rain. France’s greatest Emperor, a tiny, busy canvas drawing, smiled at the pandemonium. To a man who had marched

successfully on Moscow, this was just another day. He looked on as pedestrians, frenzied by the rain and the water and an unspoken fear of standing still, dashed in front of abrupt taxis, and dodged skidding buses. Everyone had a place to be, a dry place to work, and no bus or taxi would make them wait.

Napoleon looked straight ahead. There were two great stone lions, roaring forever. The Emperor ignored them. Further ahead was a column, a great stone column, unnaturally tall against the people, buses and embassies. What caught Napoleon’s attention was the figure at the top of the tower.

Nelson. Admiral Horatio Nelson. Napoleon’s nemesis in Egypt. The destroyer of Napoleon’s fleet at Trafalgar. France’s Emperor had spent the best part of two centuries in the same room as his first enemy, Wellington, waiting for a chance to wreak revenge. Now, with no delay at all, his second great foe stood right in front of him, immobilised in stone, easy prey. Napoleon was the lion now.

Napoleon, tiny in canvas, scuttled magnificently down the steps. He ignored the rain. He ignored the tourists, He ignored the cameras. The only thing he saw was Nelson, at the top of his column, at the top of the lion’s game. Napoleon strode decisively to the base of the huge pillar, and began to climb.

Alicia had a nemesis to distract her from the rain: other people’s umbrellas. Deciding that her travelcard was more urgent than her work, she was hurrying to St Paul’s, but it was not an easy feat. Umbrellas are, universally, too big. They are swords as well as shields – as well as guarding the person from wet weather, thought Alicia, they are also designed to seize control of as much of the pavement as possible from anyone who might want it. Umbrellas barged and jostled with one another along the city streets, a relentless, futile struggle for power. Alicia ducked swinging brollies, she sidestepped twirling canes. She would get there, she determined, she would not be too late – another Londoner trying to do everything on Earth in the morning, and be reasonably punctual nonetheless.

As she rushed, Alicia was indignant. Her ticket had been taken by a nameless stranger who even had the nerve to leave a note. Not only was the ticket gone, but the stranger would only give it back in a certain place – which itself was a fair walk away. She felt cheated.

Mr Curble felt cheated. A meeting in Big Ben at 0930, and he had to take care of a horse.

It stood in the lobby, big and white, sniffing. Mr Curble looked at it distastefully. He didn’t like horses, he decided.

The receptionist tripped over to him. “Gerry Curble? Your horse is here. And this was left for you,” she handed him a basket of fruit, “Thanks.”

Thank you,” he replied. The receptionist hurried off, glad to be away from both Mr Curble and the horse.

Mr Curble walked, cautiously, towards his steed. He wasn’t sure how you were supposed to address a horse.

Eileen. Good morning.”

The horse ignored him. He tried again.

Eileen.” Perhaps there was some sort of special etiquette one had to use for horses.

Would you care for some fruit?” he asked, handing her an orange. She ate the orange, and promptly disappeared.

Eileen?” A neighing sound behind him indicated that she had re-appeared there. Some glittery stars fell from the ceiling. Mr Curble glanced apprehensively at the clock.

Ah, there you are. Some more fruit?”

In one great gulp, the horse swallowed the rest of the fruit basket, including a misshapen pineapple. A long swallow, and she was staring indifferently at the loos again. Mr Curble tried addressing her once more, but it was no use. Without fruit, he was of no interest to her whatsoever. Mr Curble rang the reception desk buzzer, a beret of a bell that might have pleased a different kind of man.

The receptionist hurried out again. “How may I help, Gerry?”

Mr Curble’s eyes were still on the time. “Yes, um, I have a meeting to attend. Would you mind looking after this horse, just until my meeting finishes?”

Of course the receptionist wouldn’t mind looking after a horse.

What time will you be back?”

Mr Curble was turning towards the door, and didn’t respond. Of course the receptionist wouldn’t mind looking after a horse for an indeterminate period of time. Mr Curble pushed open the circular door, one of those doors where you stand in a little compartment that’s slightly too big for one person and too small for two people. Someone was behind him. He wondered whether it was more polite to let the person behind him stand in his compartment or let the person wait for the next.

It was then that Mr Curble realised no person followed him. It was the horse. The mare respectfully waited for the compartment behind Mr Curble’s, and then glided into it, pushing the door around with some unseen mystical power.

Mr Curble walked out onto the pavement, heart pounding, like a nervous suitor on a first date, if that first date was with an otherworldly horse. It did not occur to Mr Curble that he had successfully followed Michelle’s instructions and persuaded the horse to leave. All he knew was that there was a meeting at 0930, and he couldn’t very well take a horse into the Houses Of Parliament. That was the sort of thing that started Civil Wars. He turned to re-enter the Home Office, just to check whether the horse was actually following him, or whether it had left of its own accord.

The horse followed him back into the Home Office. Mr Curble didn’t even have to push the door for himself. Mr Curble, once inside, turned round, leaving the building again.

The horse followed.

Mr Curble found himself outside the building, with his new partner. Looking at the horse, an idea made a cameo in his brain. He bolted back into the building, horse trailing majestically, then darted towards the reception desk, where the receptionist stirred, alarmed. As the horse pursued, Mr Curble darted back to the circular door, hoping to catch the horse out.

Not possible. By the time Mr Curble was through the circular door, the horse had already re-appeared outside, unhurried, perfectly groomed.

The horse knew that great things would happen today, and those great things belonged to Mr Curble. But the civil servant knew not, and so turned back into the doors, spinning round to the building – finding the horse inside – and spinning back to the outside, seeing the horse re-appear there. Finally, after several more spins of the door, and several interested onlookers gathering, he gave in.

Eileen,” he panted, “I have a meeting in Big Ben. You may accompany me, and then we’ll find you some hay.”

Maybe, on the way to the Government, he could find out what hay was.

The (soon-to-be) Olympic athletes were finding out what Government was. Locked in their pay dispute with the Governing Bodies Of Sport, they were deciding on what terms the Olympic Village was to become an independent nation.

We need a presidential system!” an American swimmer yelled. “We need two people to stand, then we’ll vote on our leader.”

I’ll stand!” shouted a pole-vaulter. “I’ll stand as both the candidates.”

A marathon runner was puzzled. “So the choice is between you and you?”

Yes.”

I’ll vote for the first you,” said a javelin thrower.

The swimmer tried to regain control. “We can’t have one person as both the candidates. That’s not a fair election.”

It is where I’m from,” someone said.

Let’s vote on who we want to be candidates. Put your hand up if you want to be a candidate,” another javelin thrower said. Everyone put their hand up, except a weightlifter, who put both his hands up.

I put the most hands up!” he said, “so I get to be a candidate!”

Yeah, well I can throw a discus the furthest, so I should be a candidate,” said a discus thrower.

The leader should be Russian,” said a Russian, while the discus thrower and the weightlifter started having a fight. Soon the rest of the field-event athletes joined in, and the room was thrown into chaos, leaving the non-throwers with little chance.

Once order had been restored, the swimmer spoke. He was standing on a chair, having been flung there by a former shot-put bronze medallist.

Guys, I’ve got a plan. I’ll pass this hat around. Get a piece of paper, write who you’d like to be Village Leader, and we’ll pull a name out the hat. Sound like a plan?”

Who gets to pull the name out the hat?” someone said. “We should vote on it!”

Everyone ignored that last remark, passing the hat round. The weightlifter sneaked two pieces of paper into the hat. They had to wait several minutes for the cyclists to write on their paper.

Everyone ready?” said the swimmer, taking the hat back. It was a giant novelty top hat, made of purple felt and embroidered with gold stars. He put his hand – his whole arm, in fact – deep into the purple felt, and pulled out a wonky strip of paper.

Our new leader is… Pierce Brosnan?”

One of the British athletes cheered, but was quickly silenced by the ping-pong players.

Okay, let’s try that again,” said the swimmer, putting his arm back into the hat, “Our spokesperson is actually going to be…” he squinted at another piece of paper, wishing he’d remembered his reading glasses, “The Cat In The Hat.”

Silence, broken only by someone muttering, “A puppet ruler, then.”

The swimmer looked round. “This isn’t working, is it?”

People nodded. A long-distance runner spoke up. “It’s your American systems, they don’t work. We need a dictatorship, not your weak Western democracy.”

The nodding turned to shaking.

What we need is someone neutral to decide,” a French high-jumper said. The shaking turned back to nodding.

In the corner the Swiss athletes smiled. A neutral to decide! Their plans were coming together. One of them got out his phone and began to text.

His compatriot over in Southwark, the one with the banner, smiled as she read the text. It was time to go. Leaving a co-conspirator behind at Southwark Cathedral, she and a fellow invader were outside the Globe Theatre, overlooking the grimy Thames. There was a banner here too, though she wasn’t responsible for it.

SONNET FRIDAY, it read. The blonde woman smirked at her countryman, who was dragging a heavy suitcase behind him.

Let’s go, Florian.” They ascended the steps to the new Tudor theatre, Florian pulling the case up each individual step, skinning off the lacquer. They headed to the performers’ entrance, where a middle-aged woman with a clipboard appeared.

Welcome! Are you performers today? What are your names?”

The blonde woman spoke. “I am Lara, the German entry, and this is Florian, the French entry.”

Hello. Just go to the left, and the cloakroom is just there to put your things,” the clipboard-woman said, ticking the clipboard twice, eyeing the suitcase with interest. “Turnout’s a bit low so far, but I’m sure more of your fellow performers will turn up soon.”

Lara kept her game face on, and started to turn to the left. At the last moment, as if forgetting something, she turned back hurriedly to the clipboard-woman.

Excuse me, do you have a list of the running order today?”

Oh, of course!” She pulled a piece of paper from her clipboard and handed it to Lara. “Here you go.”

Thank you,” Lara smiled politely, beckoning Florian towards the cloakrooms. Her watch told her it was 0929, and they only had half an hour to prepare.

Mr Curble only had a minute to prepare. He could see Big Ben now, a good fifty metres in front of him, and he panted as he scuttled towards it. A more entrepreneurial man might have used the magic horse beside him to reach the tower, but this thought did not occur to Mr Curble. The horse glided alongside, shedding pink candy floss from its mane. The candy floss quickly dissolved in the rain, leaving strands of wobbly scarlet sugar floating towards the gutters.

The horse took up a lot of the pavement. Serene and untroubled, it was not the sort of animal to move aside for precoccupied pedestrians with mobile phones, so Mr Curble found himself apologizing frequently to harried dignitaries who, busy trying to resolve HR issues over the phone, found themselves walking into a magic horse. To Mr Curble’s credit, he had begun to accept that he was now being followed around by a horse. It was probably down to his charisma and winning ways. What was less clear was how he would get past security at the Houses of Parliament with such a companion.

They crossed the road at a canter, papers and locks blowing in the traffic’s congestion, making for the security entrance near the foot of Big Ben. They passed Marochetti’s Richard the Lionheart statue: Mr Curble’s horse glanced dismissively at Coeur de Lion’s steed. There was no question who would win in a fight.

Your papers, please, Sir and Madam,” the security guard asked. Mr Curble, his face tightened, responded.

Er, we’re here for a meeting in Big Ben.”

Ah, through the scanners you go then.” The guard directed them through to a n airport-style security booth, where they had their photos taken. Mr Curble was searched by a guard, his pockets revealing nothing. The guard turned to the horse.

Okay then, Miss…”

Eileen,” Mr Curble informed him. “She’s from Wolverhampton,” he explained.

Ah,” said the guard, understanding everything. He had never seen a horse before, either. He quickly checked the horse for items, then ushered her through. Handing them passes – with their photos on – he directed them to the Big Ben meeting rooms.

The horse didn’t look too happy with its photo. The camera had focused far too much, and you could only make out one of its eyes.

Perhaps you shouldn’t have stood so close,” said Mr Curble to the horse.

Alicia was close to St Paul’s now. She had not been there since the protesters had set up camp. There. Turning the corner, she noticed the camp before she noticed the cathedral.

There were yurts. Lots of yurts. Pyramids of fabric, somewhere between a curtain and a carpet, pulled themselves a little way into the sky, forming a small nomadic village on the City of London steppes. A faint melody of conversation bumbled from the yurts, probably from the largest yurt, placed in the middle of the village. Around the tapestries were small tarpaulin tents, some competently constructed, others hawling and heaving in the rain, unable to defend themselves against the swirling onslaught of the sky. No protestors were visible now, presumably because they were locked in deep strategic planning.

Alicia knew her travelcard would not be in the protest shanty town. She trotted to the steps of St Paul’s, and suddenly saw someone familiar.

Down in the protest town, there was a terribly important debate going on.

Biscuits are definitely better than cakes,” said a bearded youth.

No way, cake beats biscuit. It’s like scissors and paper,” said a non-bearded youth. The listeners, all huddled in the chief yurt, started to take sides.

Cake!”

Biscuit!”

This argument was not going to be resolved any time soon. It had all started when the bearded youth had found an item of confectionery on the floor, and had wondered whether it was a cake or a biscuit.

I still think it’s a biscuit. It’s quite hard.”

The non-bearded youth, determined to disagree, countered, “No, it’s a cake. Cake goes hard when it’s stale. What you’ve got there is a bit of mouldy cake.”

It might be a mouldy biscuit.”

No, mate, it can’t be. Biscuits go soft when they go stale, cake goes hard. That’s the difference between cake and biscuits.”

The bearded youth, losing a losing fight, went silent, trying to think of a comeback. He was, however, saved.

The huddle felt a lash of rain and turned to look at the entrance of the yurt. In the opening, folding back the hood, stood a tall man in pretend army uniform.

Jim!” they cried, for it was he, the man in uniform. He was a little wizened, but still maintained a thick tousle of cloud-black hair.

Did I hear someone define cakes and biscuits?” he intoned deeply.

The non-bearded youth nodded eagerly. “Me, me, it was me!” He even raised his hand.

Sinclair.” Jim took a long look at Sinclair, the non-bearded youth. “You were incorrect.”

Sinclair’s hand fell, glumly tapping the floor.

Sinclair, let me ask you some questions about biscuits and cakes. Perhaps we shall see whether you really understand the essential nature of these delicacies.”

Sinclair’s hand did a worried wobble.

Tell me,” Jim demanded, “Are cakes delicious?”

Yes,” replied Sinclair obediently, “They are delicious.”

Good.” Jim turned to the whole group, “Tell me, are biscuits not also delicious?” His tone mocked the chance of a challenge.

Yes,” echoed the group, “Biscuits are delicious.”

Correct. Now, Sinclair, you said that cakes go hard when stale, whereas biscuits go soft when stale., yes?”

Sinclair, apprehensively, non-committally tried to shake and nod his head simultaneously. His hand wobbled again.

You did, didn’t you?”

Yes,” Sinclair replied, more certain now.

Jim continued. “Tell me, Sinclair, are stale things delicious?”

Sinclair considered for a second. “No.”

Correct. Stale things are horrible. You would much rather eat fresh, delicious things, rather than something left for days in the bread bin.”

The whole huddle nodded enthusiastically. Fresh cakes and pastries for all, that was something everyone stood for.

In that case, are stale things delicious?”

No!”

And we agreed that both biscuits and cakes were delicious, did we not?”

We did!”

So, in that case, if something is not delicious, it cannot be a cake?”

Correct!”

So something that is stale, not being delicious, cannot be a cake?”

Correct!” The crowd were enjoying themselves.

So” – Jim’s voice reached a triumphant pitch – “cakes and biscuits cannot be stale! If they were stale, then they would not be delicious, and we have already agreed that they are delicious!”

The crowd gasped, but also covered their ears a bit. Jim’s triumphant pitch was very high, and very shrill. Jim continued.

Let us return to the beginning. Sinclair, you said that the difference between cakes and biscuits was that cakes go hard when stale, and biscuits go soft when stale.”

Sinclair looked down at the floor, beaten.

But we’ve learned that cakes and biscuits cannot be stale., yes?”

Nods.

So, if cakes and biscuits cannot be stale, then the way cakes and biscuits change when they become stale cannot be the difference between cakes and biscuits.” Triumphant pitch again. “In conclusion, Sinclair, that is why you were incorrect!”

What is this, then?” the bearded youth asked. Surely Jim could answer his most pressing question.

That, Travis, is neither a cake nor a biscuit, that’s what it is. And I hope,” Jim said, turning back to the whole huddle, “that this is a lesson in lateral thinking for all of us. If we are going to win, if we are going to defeat The Cause Of All Society’s Problems, which is what we are gathered here to protest about, if we are going to oppose The Cause, then we need to think laterally. Using our brains – something those capitalist suits never do – we can undermine the hierarchy of the establishment for good!”

Jim picked up the non-biscuit, non-cake, and threw it as hard as he could. It soared over the makeshift tents and fragile yurts, a parabola in the rain, guided by the roars and cheers of the protest town, to land right at the feet of the woman in the bobble hat that Alicia had last seen on Tower Gateway platform.

That’s what I say to the Establishment!” Jim shouted.

Mr Curble was in the clock tower of the Establishment. Around the meeting table were three wonks – including Mr Curble – two gurus, and a horse, who didn’t seem to mind being there. An intern was busy photocopying, or something. The All-Purpose guru, who was chairing the meeting, lounged to his feet.

You all know why we’re here. The PM has requested us to find a new name for Big Ben, in order to commemorate…. something. The Diamond Jubilee, maybe, the Olympics, the winner of Strictly Come Dancing, anything will do.”

Yeah, I get you,” the Marketing Guru interrupted, “Big Ben. Bells. Yes Minister. 20th Century. We need something that says 2012, it’s here, it’s coming at you. Any suggestions?”

Its real name is St Stephen’s Tower. Why don’t we go back to calling it that?” a wonk suggested.

Not sure anyone’s going to call it that-” the All-Purpose Guru began.

I like it,” interrupted the Marketing Guru. “Big Steve. Yeah I like it. Big Steve, he’s here, he’s big, he’s coming at you-”

The Marketing Guru interrupted himself. “Big Steve, you’d find him in the pub, eating crisps, shouting at Arsenal on the telly, Big Steve, coming at you, 2012, it’s here.”

Not commemorating anything though, is it?” said the All-Purpose Guru. “The PM wants the name to commemorate something. Any more ideas, people?”

Wonk Number Two spoke up. “Why don’t we mark the occasion of the Diamond Jubilee by naming after the monarch herself, Queen Elizabeth?”

A noble suggestion-”

“”Elizabeth Tower.” Marketing Guru again. “Big Lizzie. Up there in Westminster, looking over the politicians, making sure they don’t get up to no good. Big Lizzie, coming at you, watching over you. I like it. 2012.”

Isn’t it what they’re expecting us to do, though?” All-Purpose Guru countered. “I mean, Diamond Jubilee, name every building after the Queen. Same old, same old. And people might get confused if every building’s named after her-”

Yeah, you’re walking down the street, looking for Elizabeth Tower, and here’s Elizabeth Hall, there’s Elizabeth Terrace, next to you is Elizabeth Post Office. Nothing’s standing out, guys.”

The horse wandered over to the other side of the room. It spied some hotdesks.

Why don’t we name it after an Olympian?” suggested Wonk Two.

Yeas, a really successful one. Who are our most successful Olympians?” asked Wonk One.

Well, there’s Sir Steve Redgrave-”

Big Steve!” Marketing Guru, obviously. “I like it. But he’s retired now, hasn’t he? Let’s get someone modern, cutting edge. Who’s winning gold medals now?”

Our most successful current Olympian,” Wonk Two began slowly, “is that sailor chap. What’s his name? Ainslie.”

Big Ainslie? I need a first name, guys, it’s informal.” The room was deep in thought.

It’s Ben Ainslie,” said the intern, who was now cleaning the hotdesks.

Ben Ainslie! I like it! Here’s London, sailing to the future, sailing through 2012, coming at you. Ben Ainslie. Big Ben! It’s short, it’s snappy, it’s alliterative! It gets my vote.”

The All-Purpose Guru nodded in approval. “All agreed on Big Ben?”

Wonk One nodded. Work Two nodded. Mr Curble, not really listening, nodded. Even the horse gave a little waggle of its tail.

Big Ben it is,” said the All-Purpose Guru, happily. “And only in half an hour, too! I can’t remember the last time we managed to reach a decision so quickly. Have a nice day, all.”

He held open the door. Mr Curble was the first to rush out, taking his horse with him.

Sorry about taking your ticket,” the bobble hat was saying to Alicia. The hat was soaking wet. “I’m not really sorry. I needed it.”

She held the travelcard in her hand.

Don’t you have one?” Alicia asked, pointedly. She didn’t appreciate all this rain.

No, I’m a wanted woman. If the authorities catch me, I’m done. Thanks again.” She held out the travelcard for Alicia, who still wanted answers.

Wanted? By the police?”

The bobble hat looked a bit peeved. “No, by Transport For London. TFL. It’s… it’s complicated. I’m out to prove you can do anything you want in this city without anyone noticing, and I guess TfL noticed. Oooh, cake!”

She picked up the non-biscuit, non-cake that lay beside her, putting it in her coat pocket, and continued

They notice a bit too much. I just need to keep off their radar. It’s best that way. Like, if you hadn’t seen the note, if you’d gone down the stairs next to the side exit, you’d be on their radar too by now…”

She trailed off as she noticed Alicia’s face. It was the face of someone who’d stolen a whole cake, not just nibbled away at the edges.

You did go down the side exit, didn’t you?”

Alicia nodded.

You’re on their radar, aren’t you?”

Alicia nodded.

Wait here, let me just check the new London Gutter.” The bobble hat skipped over to a vendor, who was handing out free copies on the steps below.

Oh no.” She surveyed pages 2 and 3. “Right, you’d better come with me. We’ll find somewhere safe.”

What about work? I’ve got to get back to-”

No work for you now. You’re on the run. We’re on the run. We’ve got transport authorities to dodge, and an Olympics to save. Let’s go.”

London Story – Chapter One

This is the story of Alicia, who lost her train ticket.

Chapter One – 8 am

The London Gutter

London’s muck – on the hour, every hour.

27th July 2012, 0800

ATHLETES: WE’LL RUN IT OURSELVES

With just 9 hours until the Opening Ceremony, the Olympic Village is getting stroppy.

Yesterday’s row over pay is turning into a full-on lover’s tiff.

Free food, a free village and chasing shiny medals isn’t enough for the athletes. The runners and jumpers want even more. They want power.

We’re sick of governments and governing bodies pocketing all our money and telling us what to do,” said the athletes’ spokesperson, “So we’re taking control. We’ve declared independence. From now on the Olympic Village will be an independent state, running its own affairs.”

As of 0745, insiders say that the Village is forming a government. Experts agree that any Olympic Village country can only be a disaster.

There isn’t a hope,” said our sports boffin, “Athletes can’t run a country. Some of them can’t even run a relay without falling over.”

They’ll give up way before the Opening Ceremony starts and we can get down to the real business: cheering on Team GB!”

When asked to comment, he chairman of the World Official Olympic Federation (WOOF) said he was playing hard-ball.

The athletes will be jumping through the Olympic hoops before too long, I dare say.”

In other news

It’s Raining! Celebs get their coats!

Five commuters you won’t have missed this morning. Phwoar!

22 Signs That You’re Late For Work

This Hour’s Weather

Chance of rain: 107%

Want more gutter press? Follow us on Twitter, just like we follow you!

Alicia had mistakenly picked up the rag this morning. Now she was badly tessellated on a crowded Docklands Light Railway train, a square jammed between triangles, the victim of a failed game of Tetris, and could not toss the paper away. She tried to balance it over the rail, but two schoolchildren blocked her way. She attempted to drop it behind a burly official, but he was pressed too hard against the doors. A bobble-hatted commuter smiled from the side of a mouth, but did not lend a hand in help. Alicia gave up, and folded the paper in unkempt, tatty disgust.

An ordinary Friday, she thought. Rain outside the carriage. Rain inside the carriage, dripping from every hidden umbrella, wrapped in the folds of every darkened coat, gathering stealthily in puddles on the floor. Little tears of rain trickled down the burly official’s bald head, yolk running down a hard-boiled egg. Suit sleeves pulled too tight as their owners gripped the overhead rails, as if they could be swept to the floor by the train’s motion, drowned in the woollen, grey ocean.

The train has reached its destination. Please exit by the right-hand doors of the carriage in the direction of travel,” intoned a recorded, disembodied voice.

The woollen ocean stood, as one, to nonconformist attention, turning noiselessly to the left-hand doors of the carriage. The train stopped, the doors turned, and they poured from the train, tiding Alicia along with them, an industrial revolution more powerful than any locomotion.

That was when Alicia noticed her travelcard was missing.

Across town, over in Jermyn Street, a man’s ‘H’ was missing.

‘Is name was ‘Arry, and ‘e was a tailor. Finest tailor in Jermyn Street, folks would ‘ave you believe, folks being ‘im, of course.

‘Arry would greet you inside, ‘e would, and take your measurements. Get you a cuppa, go into a back room, fix up a suit. All in an ‘our. Maybe ‘alf an ‘our, if you was little. But today ‘is assistant was running late, and ‘Arry couldn’t find ‘is letters. No business with folks in Mayfair if you ain’t got your consonants.

‘Arry leaned out ‘is door. “Walter, ‘urry up!”

A dotted figure down the street hastened into a trot. The figure hadn’t added up to much, hadn’t sparked any power in the razzamatazz of Central London. There was only one street in the whole of Mayfair with an ‘H’ in it, and Whaltherh didn’t put it there.

Come on, not got all day! Finally!”

‘Arry proffered ‘is ‘and. Whaltherh, wearily, shook it.

Let’s see. Haberdashery. Cloth. Hosier. Hirsute. That’s much more like it. Thank you, time to get back to business. Good day.”

Harry smiled a quotidian smile, backed into his shop, and closed his door. A little ring of the bell signified Whaltherh’s work was done for the day. He shambled away, morose.

Whaltherh had been born with a peculiar talent, one shared by few in this world. He could add the letter ‘h’ to things. He could turn trees into threes, rates into haters. Once upon a time, Whaltherh had turned a cap into a chap, but the chap thumped him. Turned out the chap had rather liked being a cap, and it was extremely presumptuous of Whaltherh to go about making caps into chaps. The chap sued, launching criminal proceedings, and Whaltherh lost heavily. What’s more, the judge had prohibited Whaltherh from ever shaking hands with a man named Alf, just in case he accidentally hewed Alf in half.

Whaltherh shuddered at the memory. It had been very embarrassing. Not particularly costly, as he had changed his crime into a chimer and hauled away a stately old grandfather clock, but embarrassing nonetheless.

Being the H Man just wasn’t very helpful. The ‘h’ has already been squished through the English language, and Whaltherh couldn’t fashion much more with it. Nothing needs another ‘h’. He was stuck in Mayfair, fitting tailors with elocution, and there was nothing else to do. Imagine if he had been born the E Man, he often said to strangers on trains. He might have made mad men into made men, and made their wins into wines. The H Man brooded through the streets, feeling the rain fall, and his head fell, too. An E Man would have rowed upon this downpour.

The H Man was miserable about the weather, but he wasn’t the only one.

Over in the Home Office, a civil servant called Curble sat moodily at a desk.

What a morning, Angela,” he said to Angela, who had just popped in to the office. She bobbed up and down on pogo-stick feet.

The bus was late,” he continued, “and I like my buses exactly on time, thank you very much-”

He waved a finger didactically, while she pogo-d her feet more urgently.

-and then the bus stopped at all the red lights from Liverpool Street Station! Every single one, I do believe. Now I’m not one for the Tube, never have been-”

Angela unconsciously lifted her umbrella, ready to burst upon any interlude.

-never will be, but even I was tempted this morning, sitting on the top deck outside Charing Cross. It’s pouring out there, really heaving it down. The Gutter gave it a 107% chance of precipitation, but I think it’s higher than that, myself-”

He paused for breath, and Angela burst.

Gerry, there’s a horse in the office.”

He disagreed. “Hoarse? No, you’re sounding perfectly lucid-”

Before he could pick up where he left off, Angela took the gap in the traffic.

No, I’m not hoarse. There is a horse. There is a horse in the office.”

I don’t understand.”

There’s a… there’s…” she was struggling to find a simpler way of expressing herself. “There’s a horse in the office.”

You can see a horse from the office? There are horses on Horse Guards’ Parade, that’s why it’s called Horse Guards’ Parade, because of the horses.”

No, in the office. There is a horse in the office. Gerry, there’s a horse in the office.” She wondered if she was getting her point across. He looked a tiny bit dumbfounded, a square face in round glasses. She recalled the training day last week, the workshop on different types of learning, and decided to try a different approach. Picking up a whiteboard marker, she drew a picture of a horse.

What is that?”

She stood back to admire her handiwork, zooming in to add some hooves.

Some kind of animal? A sheep, a bird, a Yeti?” Gerry didn’t understand why there was a Yeti on his board.

In exasperation, Angela wrote the word HORSE under the horse. Huffing, she beckoned Mr Curble to stand up and follow her out of the room. He obliged.

They walked out of the room and into the main section of the office. Like most early mornings, it waited patiently for its civil servants to arrive, an eager host for the day’s machinations. Unlike most early mornings, there was a horse.

A big, white horse, chewing the printer paper absent-mindedly.

Gerry stood there, in both awe and horror.

A horse.”

Yes,” Angela replied.

A horse in the Home Office! This is nearly as bad as my bus being late,” Mr Curble said. He had never actually seen a horse before. It was bigger than he would have imagined, not that he ever had.

What’s its name?”

I don’t know.”

Didn’t you check its passport?” Mr Curble asked.

I don’t think horses have passports. I mean, they have some sort of official documentation, or at least their owners do, but I’m not sure they carry them around.”

What’s that in its mouth, then?”

The horse did indeed have a passport in its mouth. Several more passports lay by its feet, pages torn unsympathetically.

Oh, it got at the passport machine,” Angela explained. “Took it from there, I think.”

Gerry wasn’t listening. “Let’s take a look at your documentation, then,” Mr Curble said to the horse, which promptly vanished.

Ah, an invisible horse!” Mr Curble remarked. They must all be invisible, he supposed, except the ones that were visible. The passport had fallen from the horse’s mouth and flopped on the ground.

So we have…” he examined the passport closely, “Montague. Eileen Rachel Montague.” A picture of a middle-aged woman frowned back at him. “Eileen? Eileen!” he called, as Alexander might have called his Bucephalus, or Eileen might have beckoned her cat Fuzzykins from the garden. “Eileen!”

He turned to Angela.

If you see Eileen – here this is what she looks like,” Mr Curble said, handing Angela the passport and pointing at the photo, “then take her down to the Customs Department. It’s all in order. She’s from Wolverhampton, says so here.”

Startled, she managed to stammer a reply.

What if I don’t see her? She’s eaten most of the printer paper already. And when I do see her, she disappears or flies away. And she’s done unmentionable things to the hotdesks,” Angela finished, helplessly, but Mr Curble had ambled back to his room, determined to begin his paperwork.

Perhaps the horse explains how the Home Office missed an enemy invasion.

It started slowly. The Swiss always start slowly. At 8 o’clock sharp, a prim, tall figure strode through the pedestrianized area outside Southwark Cathedral, balancing a tray of expensive watches.

Watches,” he murmured to busy walkers, “Authentic Swiss watches.” No-one paid any attention, just as he planned. The invasion had begun.

A second figure, just as tall, just as prim, with hair swept to the other side of his head, appeared at 8.10 precisely, emerging from the cathedral shadows. In his arms he carried luxury chocolate.

Chocolate,” he whispered, seductively, to sleepy walker-commuters. He knew, of course, that it was too early for chocolate. “Luxurious Swiss chocolate.” The two figures made no eye contact, but, at 8.15, they nodded to one another.

A young blonde woman, uniformed in a coat, emerged into the rain. She carried a great roll of red fabric, which she unfurled rhythmically, purposefully. With her two co-conspirators, she erected the banner beside the path.

VISIT SWITZERLAND, it read. The blonde woman admired her handiwork for a second, then stood still, hands clasped gently in front of her body. She smiled the smile of an estate agent, and the invasion was truly under way.

Switzerland was, in a way, responsible for the disappearance of Alicia’s train ticket, but she didn’t know it yet. For the moment she was scrabbling on Tower Gateway’s platform, searching through her bag for the travelcard.

Alicia carried round her own miniature planet. For some people, bags are designed to hold essentials, transport things they might need during day-to-day life. Alicia’s bag was not like that. Perhaps, a long time ago, it was as a functional accessory, but it swiftly developed the fanaticism of an unsightly conquistador. At first it had been modest, pragmatic, cloaking an extra loyalty card or two, but then it became colonial. Soon packets of sugar and over-ambitious hotel shampoos found themselves embroiled in in its fabricated fervour, quickly followed by restaurant leaflets, religious pamphlets and long-forgotten receipts. Eager to win the world, the bag pocketed everything, becoming, to all intents and purposes, entirely useless.

Alicia was suffering from that uselessness now. She was being thrown around in the sea of coats, unable to find her ticket, her compass in these storm-tossed waters. The schoolchildren clambered around and between legs, practising orang-utan acrobatics on commuter climbing-frames. The bobble hat swam buoyantly in front, sinking down the exit steps. Even the burly official made his serious, eggy journey towards the way out. Alicia, meanwhile, found pens, discarded staplers, and a small packet of biscuits. She discarded old maps, a shiny hairbrush, warranties, crinkled sachets of lemonade powder. None of these would pay for her train travel, she mused frenziedly.

There was, of course, one option. There were no ticket barriers on the Docklands Light Railway. If she could just walk past the ticket-swipe machine confidently, she might not have to pay at all…

She tightened her coat and stood up straighter. Act brave, she thought, act tough. Reaching the stairs, she put her left hand on the handrail, and began to descend.

It was then that she saw them.

Ticket inspectors, three of them, at the bottom of the first flight. They half-blocked the passageway, slowing everyone down. Wild in panic, she stopped, clutching the rail hard, and looked around her.

Only one idea came to mind. Alicia turned and ran, holding her hold-all tight. It was a pity, really, that she had only searched her bag, and not her trousers. The ticket was not in her pockets either, but the thief had placed a note there. Perhaps London’s fate on that wet July day would have been entirely different, had Alicia merely checked her pockets as well as her bag. She had always looked on her bag as an empire and, like many an emperor before her, did not find conquests helpful at the flood.

A portrait of Napoleon, dry and comfortable within the National Portrait Gallery, might have attested to that, if a painting could attest to anything.

Napoleon, however, would not be dry and comfortable for long. He was about to come alive.

Paintings do awake from sleep sometimes. That’s why The Scream can never be placed in a greenhouse. Cartoons were invented when Leonardo Da Vinci caught his Mona Lisa popping out for a sandwich. Napoleon had never awakened before, but he had long been dormant.

His portrait, a foot-high Third Revolution monstrosity, stood next to a miniature of Wellington, inhabiting a room of forgotten curiosities. As it happened, most of the other curiosities were similar-looking portraits of Victorian diplomats, who had long since retreated tactfully from history. Napoleon and Wellington joined them more for the mediocrity of their painters than the majesty of their subjects.

No-one was in the room, unless you count the guard, but he was more asleep than the portraits. His wet footsteps unsettled the dust, if only slightly.

Napoleon emerged from his portrait yawning. It had been a long exile. He surveyed the room around him soberly, without surprise or alarm. Diplomat. Diplomat. Diplomat. Wellington. Diplomat. Diplomat.

Slowly, Napoleon turned back to his nemesis. Suddenly, after two hundred years of waiting, he had the chance to strike. Raising his tiny sabre high, he rushed at Wellington’s canvas, tearing it from the frame with four quick, practised slashes. Wellington fell to the floor, more serene in paint than he ever was in life. The mighty French emperor scrunched the canvas into a ball and, summoning all his paper-fragile weight, jumped up and down on it in fury, bouncing every inch of his foot upon the hated portrait. Soon the fight was over and Wellington lay in tatters, centuries of Corsican fury avenged.

Before Napoleon could return to his own frame, however, and complete the perfect assassination, the guard awoke. In normal circumstances this would not have been a fair fight. Napoleon, Emperor of France, Conqueror of Europe, commander of the greatest army in the world, brilliant military tactician, against a bus conductor volunteering in the museum on his day off.

(Incidentally, Mr Curble’s bus had been late because the company forgot they had one fewer driver on a Friday.)

Circumstances, however, were not normal. Napoleon was one foot high, two hundred years away from his power, and made of fancy paper. The bus-conducting volunteer had a very big stick.

Napoleon, employing his military strategy to the utmost, legged it. He scurried between the sleepy guard’s legs, making for the exit. Despite the volunteer’s chase and subsequent – unsuccessful – attempts to operate his radio, Napoleon climbed through a window, finding himself, rather ironically, in Trafalgar Square.

Alicia was running too. Having climbed back up the stairs, pushing past half-awake pedestrians, she was back on the station platform, with a vigilante ticket inspector yelling behind her, scrabbling up the steps. There was one more exit to the station, straight ahead, far ahead, at the far end of the platform. She pushed towards it, through marginally surprised commuters, shoving aside expectations of a woman in a wet, clean coat.

Where do you think you’re going?” panted the ticket inspector again. Having failed to slow her down once with the phrase, he prudently thought it worth trying for a second time. Alicia dashed ahead, ignoring all the disapproving glances. Nobody tried to stop her: disapproving glances didn’t cost a penny, whereas a new ticket would be at least twenty quid. No guards appeared in front of her – perhaps they were only checking at one entrance, she thought, the only thought she was capable of processing with an angry ticket inspector chasing her.

The note in her pocket told her where the inspectors were, if only she had read it.

Alicia passed the ticket office, turning left towards the escalators. If she reached them, she was safe. In Central London nothing can travel faster than the speed of escalator, as she knew from long experience.

Where do you think you’re going?”

Passers-by studiously ignored Alicia as she grabbed the escalator rail. She was safe now – the escalator went right down to the station’s exit, outside the ticket inspector’s jurisdiction. Perhaps she would have to find another way home for a while, but everything would be fine. Or so she thought.

Alicia, relaxing, put her hands in her pockets, immediately finding the note. Odd, she thought – she rarely put anything in her pockets, it just wasn’t her habit. She pulled out the note and, above, a camera focused on her face, clicking excitingly.

Unravelling the paper, Alicia frowned, reading its message.

A message had arrived for Mr Curble, interrupting his first cup of tea. The tea had, in turn, interrupted his preparation for a Big Ben meeting at 0930.

Gerry,” Angela’s boss – Michelle – stuck her head round the door. “A couple of messages. We’ve got a task for you around the horse.”

Eileen?” Mr Curble asked, just in case Michelle was talking about another horse. He didn’t know how quickly they multiplied.

The magical horse eating the printer paper, yes. We’ve had a bit of a breakthrough with her.”

Is she going back to Wolverhampton?”

No, Gerry, and this is where you come in. We got Environmental Health in first, but they’re just rat catchers. Tried to put down a couple of traps, but she kicked them away. I mean, they’re made for small rodents, not massive shape-shifting mammals. No, we need your expertise to control the situation.”

Of course. I am an expert on horses, you see. What do you have in mind?”

We pooled our knowledge on how to get rid of horses, and the maintenance man found some fruit. We created a trail for the horse, but we only lured it to the lobby. There’s a bit more fruit, and we need you to guide it somewhere else.”

Gerry looked appalled.

If you can get hold of some hay,” she continued, “that would be ideal. Thanks, Gerry.”

Isn’t Angela available?”

No, she’s cleaning the hotdesks again. We need you to do this.”

Michelle left. Mr Curble dimly recalled there being a hay market somewhere near Trafalgar Square. He decided to borrow Angela’s umbrella.

I have borrowed your travelcard,” started Alicia’s message.

There are ticket inspectors on the left-hand exit. Do not descend the steps. Go straight to the escalators by the ticket office and leave there. Go straight to St Paul’s to collect your ticket. Do not be followed. Do not attract attention.

Do not disobey these instructions. The success of the Olympic Opening Ceremony tonight depends on it.”

Whoops, thought Alicia.