The Prime Minister was an extraordinary man his
secretary decided as she slipped out of
the bedroom. Beneath his habitually grey suit, he
concealed a beautifully toned body
seemingly honed by years of hard work in gyms. He
made love with unusual energy. Naked,
she disappeared into her own room.
Five minutes after she had gone Geoffrey
woke up. He switched on the bedside lamp as he loathed the dark. He sat up and
took off his head. Underneath, much smaller and to human eyes far less
handsome, was a triangular serpents head complete with long sharp poison
injecting fangs. He lit a cigarette and wrapped his tongue around it.
His wife hated him smoking. Although she
was human, he was genuinely fond of her. He knew that sadly he would eat her
one day. He would not be able to stop himself. In his culture it was accepted
that after ten years of co-habitation the female was utilised for food.
Annoyingly, he would have to do this ordinary act in secrecy, hiding it from all
eyes. On his planet, it would be a public event.
It was a hundred years ago since he had
come to Earth with a tiny number of his colleagues. At first they lived in city
sewers, of which there were only a few, establishing small vibrant communities.
They bred rats, which they ate with gusto, fried, boiled or eaten raw with
discarded flushed vegetables. Although
it kept them alive, and they enjoyed the taste, it left them susceptible to
stray viruses. The first human eaten, a tramp who strayed into their community
changed forever their lifestyles and culinary habits. Humans they found
delicious, especially accompanied by sodden decaying sprouts.
As few humans strayed into the sewers,
they emerged into the city in search of food. To their delight they found human
herds strolling through their huge concrete nests directly above the sewers.
The Synopes ate freely.
After a decade they began to prefer the
surface world, hating the sewer with its long pleasantly rank tunnels, spending
longer and longer in the sunlight. Their artists fashioned human heads to fit
over their own. They acquired work and then, the brighter amongst them,
careers.
Once they became part of the human
community, trapping, killing and eating humans became more difficult instead of
easier. Relatives noticed when their loved ones vanished. Newspapers told of
suspected murders. They learnt to be discreet. Some acquired a taste for pork,
a reasonable but still inadequate substitute.
That
was years ago. Now, Synopes were in positions of power in every developed
country. They had grown fond of humans,
and like Ecreeps, sometimes married them. Of course, they never had children with
the humans, as they were separate specie. Sex was difficult too, but their
scientists overcame the otherwise insuperable problem of two penises in
opposite parts of the body. Synopes had no females, but as they were capable of
changing gender every twenty or thirty years, this did not prove a barrier.
He was judged the finest PM in a century.
He was up there with Churchill, Gladstone and Melbourne. He had made the
country great again! Arthur proved a problem. He was too clever for his own
good. It was Arthur, the deputy PM who threatened to bring his career down. By general agreement, he should have left
matters alone. A few well-digested people were compensation for a thriving
economy.
Arthur was on his way home that day after
ten hours dealing with the recent benefits crises. It was a balancing act,
meeting the demands of the moral majority, who rightly hated freeloaders, and
fiddling the figures. Half way back to his London home, he realised he had left
his credit cards in the office. Like all important people, he carried no money.
Arriving back at number ten, he noticed
that lights were still on in the upper floors. Saving energy was one of his
obsessions, so he went up there first. He walked in huffing and puffing with
moral indignation, to find the PM feeding on Martie, his beautiful secretary.
Her intestines were disappearing into the PM’s remarkably wide and deep maw.
His tongue, suddenly of an unnatural length, flopped over his chin.
Arthur watched stupefied. Then he bolted.
In his panic he ran around and around the lower floors gibbering.
Annoyed at having to stop eating, the PM
left his office to see what all the noise was about. He arrived in time to find
Arthur being held by two security officers, one of whom was calling a doctor on
his mobile. When Arthur saw him, he pointed a finger gurgling:
“He’s a monster. He’s eating his
secretary. I saw him. Guzzling her down, bit by bit. He isn’t human. Don’t let
him near me-he isn’t human. He’s a monster.” He then gurgled incoherently. The
officers gripped him tighter. “Don’t let him near me.” Arthur screamed.
He was still gurgling and screaming when a
doctor arrived. Administered a powerful sedative, Arthur slipped quickly into
unconsciousness.
As expected, no one initially believed
Arthur’s story. The PM was clearly a handsome ordinary male human and not a
lizard-like monster. The only evidence to support Arthur was the sudden absence
of his secretary. Her husband had not
heard from her. Neither had her parents. She had apparently disappeared off the
face of the Earth. Rumours spread, and
soon the PM was being watched.
In general, those the PM worked with
thought very well of him. Cabinet secretaries, office workers, lowly MPs and
cleaners voiced their appreciation of Ecreep. The consensus was, that he was by
far the greatest PM they had worked with, intelligent, charming, cultured. The
country was once again prosperous. Luxuries were again commonplace. The
opposition leaders were lightweight in comparison. No one then active in
British politics was his equal.
Still, the disappearance of other
personnel since he had assumed office was noted. They ran into dozens.
Arthur returned to his position as a
shadow of the man he had been. Restored to normality by psychotropic drugs, he
assumed his place back in the cabinet. Nevertheless, he refused to be alone
with the PM and found it hard to look him in the eye.
The PM, in order to deflect suspicion,
kept to a diet of pork and vegetables. As time went on, he came increasingly
ill. Pork did not provide the same degree of nutrition for his specie like
human meat. He became pale and listless.
At times he simply took to his bed. The cabinet, led by Arthur, increasingly
ran the country. They ran it badly. Industrial output fell dramatically, while
the service industries declined with equal speed. The PM’s cool astute hand was
missing. The country sank down the world league table.
Ecreep knew he was dying. His grey green
skin had grown dry and flaky. He needed proper nourishment. He began eyeing his
wife with the desires not of a husband but a lunch guest. As often with his
kind, sexual desire and hunger were entwined.
Like a good if old fashioned wife, Joyce
assiduously tended to him. As he grew weaker she was at his side day and night.
He was the only man she had ever loved, and was anxious about losing him. She would have done anything to keep him
alive. One Sunday, in the afternoon, Joyce vanished and a noticeably rejuvenated
PM emerged from his death bed, licking his lips.
3.
The following week, the country back on
track, the cabinet met up. It was a truly solemn occasion. Supplied with
immense amounts of food and coffee, they discussed replacing the PM and if
necessary, killing him. What if they were next on his menu? How many of them
would he devour before his hunger was satisfied? The discussions continued for
days.
Eventually they invited the PM into their
discussions.
George, the retiring Home Secretary and
Member for Shrewsbury, began the inquisition. He leant forward, but not too far
forward, and nervously asked, glancing at the security officers around the
table:
“Good afternoon PM.”
“Good afternoon, George.”
“How are you PM?”
“Fine George. You?”
George cleared his throat. ‘It’s about
your wife, PM.’
Ecreep nodded understandingly.
“Where is she?” George asked.
“I ate her. That’s what my specie do.”
Stunned and anguished expressions passed
over the assembled cabinet. The occasional ‘Oh, my God’ was heard.
“You ate Joyce?” George asked, his face
descending towards the table.
“Yes. If I hadn’t I would have died.” He
felt it necessary out to politeness to conclude. “She tasted excellent I might
add.” He smiled benevolently at his
colleagues.
‘Why?’ Arthur gurgled.
“The pork I ate as a substitute for human
meat was not sufficiently nutritious for my true form. I was actually dying. We
males often eat out wives as they mature. Or at least, parts of them.”
At least one embittered cabinet minister
saw the reasonableness of such behaviour.
Daphne, Minister for the Environment,
asked:
“Who are you?” There was a tremor in her
voice.
“I am a Synopes.” Ecreep replied.
“What are you doing here?” She
continued.
“I
and my friends arrived here a long time ago. We do not mean any harm.” He
replied.
“Are you an invasion force?” Arthur
asked.
Ecreep laughed. “Oh, no. How absurd. We
are far too few. Anyway, why should we? We don’t wish to rule you or harm you.
You are far too delicious.”
George nodded. “Problem is, s’.” He caught
himself. “Whoever, whatever you are, what do we do with you?”
There was immediate mumbling assent around
the table.
“What do we do with you?” George repeated.
He looked around the table, hoping for an answer.
“Well, you could eat me I suppose, but I’d
probably taste foul. As a specie, we don’t travel well.”
“We’re not going to do that.” George
insisted. “We can’t dispose of you really. Not at all.” As a group they shook
their heads. “We certainly can’t tell the British public either about your
strange origins.” He threw back his shoulders. “What can we do?”
While
the PM sat in silence, his cabinet discussed his future. The pros and cons of
each suggestion were debated at length, all day. By evening, a decision was
reached. As Arthur, the senior figure, was still in a visible state of shock,
George again took the lead.
“We will let you live.” George began. “But
only on the condition that you eat no more people.”
“If I don’t then I will die.” The PM
reminded them.
Faced with this, the cabinet renewed its
discussion. It was late by the time they had finished.
George, downing another coffee, began
again:
“Clearly, on this and other matters we
must compromise.” He swallowed hard in his nervousness. “Does your food have to
be alive?”
“Preferably. There’s far less nutritional
value when it’s dead. Humans have little flesh, and it’s much better if it’s
fresh.” He replied candidly. “If a human has been dead a long time, preserved
or frozen, they do not taste quite the same. Anyway, on a lighter note, we
prefer the fat.” His eyes shone.
“Hmmm.” George responded.
The cabinet broke off for another lengthy
discussion. Once again, food was brought in. After an hour, George resumed.
“How often exactly do you eat?”
“Oh, only once every three months.” He was
getting tired now. The process was interminable.
The cabinet returned to its
considerations. More food and drink was brought in.
“We agree to supply you with food for the
foreseeable future.”
“Oh, good.”
“Our prisons are overcrowded as it is. It
will be an efficient way of disposing of our worst criminals. And, we all have
relatives we dislike.” George smiled. “In the circumstances, we would prefer
you to remain PM.” He stretched across the table, taking the PM’s hand and
shaking it vigorously. “Welcome back, sir.”
All in the room, aside from Ecreep and
Arthur, began to loudly clap.
The rejoicing spread throughout the
building. Even those who despised all aspects of cannibalism, or who were
devout vegetarians applauded the decision. The PM stood and bowed. He turned
and walked slowly towards the door.
“Good luck PM.” Several of the cabinet
called as he departed.
Ecreep turned briefly around appraising
his colleagues. Licking his lips, he closed the cabinet door behind him.
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