goal, and all because of the girl you propose to eliminate!'
     A deathly hush had descended on the boardroom. 'That's  all very well,'
protested  someone,  'but you  know  it's  impossible to  lie  to  the girl.
Remember what happened to Agent No. BLW/553/c. We'd all end up like him.'
     'Who  said anything about lying to her?'  retorted the seventh speaker.
'We'd tell her all about our plan, naturally.'
     'Then she'd never go  along with it,' the sceptic persisted. 'The whole
idea's preposterous.'
     'Don't be too sure, my friend,' a ninth speaker broke in. 'We'd have to
make  her a tempting proposition. For instance, we could promise her as much
time as she wants.'
     'And break our promise later, of course,' said the sceptic.
     The ninth speaker gave an icy smile. 'Of  course  not,' he said. 'If we
didn't mean what we said, she'd sense it at once.'
     'No, no!' cried the chairman, banging  the table. 'I  couldn't agree to
that. If  we really gave her all the time  she wanted  it  would cost  us  a
fortune.'
     'Hardly that,' the  ninth speaker said blandly.  'How much time can one
child consume, after all? True, it would be  a minor drain on our resources,
but  think what  we'd be getting in return: the time of everyone else in the
world! Momo would consume  very little, and the little she did consume would
simply have to be charged to overheads. Consider the advantages, gentlemen!'
     127
     The ninth speaker resumed his seat while everyone weighed the  pros and
cons.
     'All the same,' the sixth speaker said eventually, 'it wouldn't work.'
     'Why not?'
     'For the simple reason, I'm afraid, that the girl already possesses all
the time  she  wants.  There'd be no  point  in trying  to  bribe  her  with
something she has plenty of.'
     'Then we'd have to deprive her of it first,' the ninth speaker replied.
     'We're talking  in circles,' the  chairman  said wearily.  'The child's
beyond our reach, that's the whole trouble.'
     A sigh of disappointment ran the length of the boardroom table.
     'May I venture a suggestion?' asked a tenth speaker.
     'The floor is yours,' said the chairman.
     The tenth speaker gave  the chairman  a little bow  before  proceeding.
'This girl,' he said,  'is fond  of her friends. She loves devoting her time
to others. What would become of  her if  there were no  one left to share it
with her? If she won't assist us of her own free  will, we  must concentrate
on her friends instead.'
     He  produced a  folder from his briefcase  and  flipped it  open.  'The
principal persons  concerned are named as Beppo Roadsweeper and Guido Guide.
I  also  have  here a list of the children  who  pay  her regular  visits. I
suggest we  simply lure these people  away,  so she can't get  in touch with
them.  What will Momo's abundance  of time  amount to when  she's all on her
own? A burden  -- a positive  curse!  Sooner or later she won't be  able  to
stand it any more, and when that time comes, gentlemen, we shall present her
with our terms. I'll  wager a  thousand years to a  microsecond that  she'll
show us the way, just to get her friends back.'
     Downcast till now, the men in grey raised their heads.
     128
     Every  face  broke into  a thin-lipped smile of triumph, every pair  of
hands applauded. The sound  reverberated along the interminable passages and
corridors like an avalanche of stones rattling down a mountainside.
        TWELVE
     Nowhere House
     Momo was  standing in  the biggest  room she'd ever seen. It was bigger
than  the biggest cathedral or concert  hall  in  the world. Massive columns
supported  a roof that could be sensed rather than  seen  in  the  gloom far
above. There were  no windows anywhere. The golden light that  wove  its way
across this immense hall came from  countless candles whose flames burned so
steadily that they looked like daubs of brilliant  paint requiring no wax at
all to keep them alight.
     The thousandfold whirring and ticking and humming and chiming that Momo
had heard on entering came from innumerable clocks of every shape  and size.
They reposed on long tables, in glass cabinets, on golden  wall brackets, on
endless rows of shelves.
     There were dainty, bejewelled pocket watches, cheap tin  alarm  clocks,
hourglasses, musical clocks with pirouetting dolls on top, sundials,  clocks
encased in wood and marble, glass clocks and clocks driven by jets of water.
On  the walls hung all manner of cuckoo clocks and other clocks with weights
and  pendulums, some swinging  slowly and majestically  and  others  wagging
busily to and fro. All  around the  room  at first-floor level ran a gallery
reached  by  a spiral staircase. Higher still was another gallery, and above
it another, and above that yet another.
     Clocks  were  standing  or  hanging wherever  Momo  looked -  not  only
conventional  clocks  but spherical  timepieces  showing  what time  it  was
anywhere  in the world, and sidereal clocks, large and small, complete  with
sun, moon and stars.
     130
     Arrayed  in the  middle of the  hall  were countless bigger clocks -  a
forest of clocks, as it were - ranging from grandfather  clocks to full-size
church clocks.
     Not a moment passed but  one  of these innumerable timepieces struck or
chimed somewhere or  other, for  each  of them showed a  different time. Far
from offending the  ear, they  combined to produce a sound as  pleasant  and
harmonious as the rustle of leaves in a wood in springtime.
     Momo roamed  from  place  to  place,  gazing  wide-eyed  at  all  these
curiosities. She had  paused beside a lavishly ornamented clock on which two
tiny dancers, a man and a woman, were standing  with hands entwined, and was
just about to prod them to see if they would move, when she heard a friendly
voice behind her. 'Ah, so you're back,  Cassiopeia,' it said. 'Did you bring
Momo with you?'
     Turning, Momo looked along an avenue between the grandfather clocks and
saw a  frail old man with silvery hair stooping  over the  tortoise.  He was
wearing a gold-embroidered frock coat,  blue-silk knee breeches, white  hose
and shoes with big gold buckles.  Lace frothed from the cuffs  and collar of
his coat,  and his silver hair was braided into a pigtail  at the back. Momo
had never seen such a  costume before, though  anyone less ignorant would at
once have recognized it as the height of fashion two centuries earlier.
     'Well,' said the old gentleman, still  bending over  the  tortoise, 'is
she here? Where is she, then?'
     He donned  a  small pair  of eyeglasses like  old  Beppo's, except that
these were gold-rimmed, and peered about him.
     'Here I am!' called Momo.
     The old  gentleman came towards her with a  beaming smile,  both  hands
extended, and  the nearer he drew  the  younger he seemed to  become. By the
time he had reached Momo's side, seized her hands and shaken them cordially,
he looked little older than herself.
     'Welcome,' he said delightedly, '- welcome to Nowhere
     131
     House. Permit me to introduce myself, Momo. My name  is Hora, Professor
Secundus Minutus Hora.'
     'Were you really expecting me?' Momo asked in surprise.
     'But of course. Why else would I have sent Cassiopeia to fetch you?' He
produced  a  diamond-studded  fob  watch  from his pocket and nipped the lid
open. 'In fact, you're uncommonly  punctual,' he  said with a smile, holding
out the watch for her inspection.
     There were no hands or  numerals on the watch face, Momo saw, just  two
very fine superimposed spirals rotating slowly in opposite directions. Every
now and then, minute dots of light appeared where the spirals intersected.
     'This watch,'  said  Professor Hora, 'is  known as a  crisimo-graph. It
accurately  records crises in the history of mankind, and one of  these rare
occurrences has just begun.'
     'What's a crisis?' asked Momo.
     'It's like this,' the professor explained. 'At certain junctures in the
course of existence, unique moments occur when everyone and everything, even
the most distant stars, combine to bring about something that could not have
happened before  and  will never happen again. Few people  know how  to take
advantage  of these critical  moments, unfortunately,  and they  often  pass
unnoticed. When someone does recognize them, however, great things happen in
the world.'
     'Perhaps one needs a watch like yours to recognize them by,' said Momo.
     Professor Hora smiled and shook  his head. 'No, my child, the  watch by
itself  would be no use to anyone. You have to know how to read it as well.'
He snapped the  watch shut and  replaced it in  his  pocket.  Then, noticing
Momo's ill-concealed surprise at his personal appearance,  he looked down at
himself and frowned. 'Ah,' he  said, ''you may be punctual, but I seem to be
rather behind the times -  in fashion, I mean. How unobservant of me. I must
put that right at once.'
     And he clicked his fingers. In a flash, his costume changed
     132
     to a black frock coat, stovepipe trousers and a stand-up collar.
     'Is that  any  better?'  he  inquired  doubtfully,  but Momo's look  of
astonishment was answer enough  in  itself. 'No, of course not,' he went  on
quickly. 'What am I thinking of!'
     Another click of  the fingers, and he instantly  appeared in an  outfit
the like of  which Momo had  never seen. Nor had anyone else, since it dated
from a hundred years in the future.
     'Still no good?' he asked. 'Never mind,  I'll get it right in the end.'
And  he clicked  his  fingers a  third  time. At long last, he  stood  there
attired in an ordinary suit of the kind men wear today.
     'That's more  like it, eh?' he said, eyes  twinkling. 'I  hope I didn't
alarm you, Momo - it was just a little  joke of mine. But now, my girl, come
with me. You've a long journey behind you, and I'm sure you'd enjoy a hearty
breakfast.'
     He took her by the  hand and led her off into the clock forest with the
tortoise following at  their heels. After twisting and  turning like a maze,
the  path  eventually  came out  in a small room whose  walls  consisted  of
gigantic grandfather  clocks. In one corner  stood  a bow-legged table,  and
beside  it  a  dainty little  sofa  and  some  matching  armchairs.  Here as
elsewhere, everything was bathed in the golden glow of  a  myriad motionless
candle flames.
     Set  out on  the  table  were a  pot-bellied  jug  and two small  cups,
together with plates, spoons and knives - all of solid, gleaming gold. There
were also two little dishes,  one containing golden-yellow butter, the other
honey like liquid  gold, and  a basket piled high with  crusty, golden-brown
rolls.  Professor  Hora  filled  both  cups  with  hot  chocolate  from  the
pot-bellied  jug  and  made a  gesture  of invitation.  'There, little Momo,
please  tuck in.' Momo  needed no second bidding. Chocolate you could  drink
she'd never heard of before. As for rolls spread with butter and honey, they
were a rare delicacy, and these rolls
     133
     tasted  more delicious than any  she'd  eaten in her  life.  Completely
wrapped up  in her wonderful  breakfast, she feasted on  it with her  cheeks
bulging and  her mind  devoid  of every other thought. Although  she  hadn't
slept a wink all night long, the food banished  her  weariness and made  her
feel fresh and lively. The more  she ate,  the better it tasted. She felt as
if she could have gone on eating like this for days on end.
     Professor Hora, who watched her benevolently, was tactful enough not to
cut short  her  enjoyment too soon by engaging in conversation.  He realized
that his  guest had years of  hunger  to make up for. Perhaps  this was why,
while  watching her, he gradually looked older and  older until he became  a
white-haired old gentleman again. When he noticed that Momo wasn't too handy
with  a knife, he spread the  rolls for her and put  them  on her  plate. He
himself ate little - just enough to keep her company.
     At  last, even  Momo  could eat  no more. She drank up  her  chocolate,
studying her host over the rim of the golden  cup and wondering  who or what
he could possibly be. He was no ordinary person, that  much was obvious, but
all she really knew about him so far was  his name. She put her cup down and
cleared her throat.
     'Why did you send the tortoise to fetch me?'
     'To protect you  from the men in grey,' Professor Hora replied gravely.
'They're  searching for  you everywhere, and you're only safe from them here
with me.'
     Momo looked startled. 'You mean they want to hurt me?'
     'Yes, my child,' the professor sighed, 'in a manner of speaking.'
     •But why?'
     'Because they're afraid of you -- because no  one could have  done them
greater harm.'
     'I haven't done anything to them,' Momo protested.
     'Oh,  yes you  have.  You  not  only  persuaded  one of them  to betray
himself, you told your friends about him. What's more,
     134
     you and  your  friends tried to  broadcast the  truth about the men  in
grey. Isn't that enough to make you their mortal enemy?'
     'But we walked right through the city,  the tortoise and I,' Momo said.
'If they were searching for me everywhere, they could easily have caught us.
We weren't going fast.'
     The tortoise had stationed herself at the professor's feet. He took her
on his lap and tickled her under the chin. 'Well, Cassiopeia,' he said  with
a smile, 'what's your opinion? Could they have caught you?'
     The word  'NEVER!' appeared like lightning on Cas-siopeia's shell,  and
the letters flickered so merrily that Momo almost thought she detected a dry
little chuckle.
     'The  thing is,' said  the  professor,  'Cassiopeia  can  see  into the
future.  Not  far  --  just  half  an  hour,  or thereabouts  -  but still.'
'CORRECTION!' flashed the shell. 'Pardon me,' said  the professor, 'I should
have said half an hour precisely.  She knows for certain what will happen in
the next thirty minutes, like whether or not  she's  going to bump into  the
men in grey, for instance.'
     'My goodness,' exclaimed Momo, 'how useful! So  if she knew  in advance
she'd meet the men in grey at such and such a spot, would she simply  take a
different route?'
     'No,' Professor Hora replied, 'I'm afraid it's not as easy as that. She
can't  undo anything she knows in advance because she knows what is actually
going  to  happen. If she  knew  she was going to meet the men in grey at  a
certain spot, she'd meet them there. She'd be powerless to prevent it.'
     Memo's  face fell.  'I  don't understand,'  she said.  'In  that  case,
there's no advantage in knowing anything in advance after all.'
     'There is sometimes,' said the professor.  'In your  case, for example,
she  knew  you  were going  to take a certain route and not meet any men  in
grey. That was an advantage,  wasn't it?' Momo  didn't  reply. Her  thoughts
were as tangled as a skein of wool.
     135
     'But to  return to you and your friends,' the professor went on. — must
congratulate you. Your posters and placards were most impressive.'
     'You mean you read them?' Momo asked delightedly.
     'Every last word,' the professor assured her.
     'Nobody else did, from the look of it,' said Momo.
     The  professor nodded sympathetically. 'I'm afraid not. The men in grey
saw to that.'
     'Do you know them well?' Momo asked.
     He nodded again and sighed. 'As well as they know me,' he said.
     Momo didn't know  what to make of this  reply. 'Do you often  go to see
them?'
     'No, never. I never set foot outside this house.'
     'What about the men in grey - do they ever come here?'
     The  professor smiled.  'Never  fear,  Momo, they can't  get  in.  They
couldn't even if they knew the way to Never Lane, which they don't.'
     Momo thought a while. Though reassured by Professor Hora's remarks, she
was eager  to  learn more about him. 'How do you come to know all this,' she
asked, '- I mean, about our posters and the men in grey?'
     'I keep a constant  watch on them and everything  connected with them,'
the  professor  told her,  'so I've  naturally been watching  you  and  your
friends as well.'
     'I thought you said you never left the house.'
     'I've no need to,' said the professor, rapidly growing younger again as
he  spoke,  'thanks  to my omnivision  glasses.'  He  took  off  his  little
gold-rimmed spectacles and held them out. 'Would you care to try them?'
     Momo  put them  on.  'I  can't  make out anything  at all,'  she  said,
screwing up her eyes and blinking. All she could see was a whirl of colours,
lights and shadows. It made her feel positively dizzy.
     136
     'Yes,'  she heard  the  professor  say,  'it's always the same to begin
with.  Seeing through  omnivision glasses isn't as  easy as all that. You'll
soon get used to them, though.'
     He stood  behind Momo's  chair  and gently adjusted the position of the
frame. At once, everything sprang into focus.
     The first thing Momo saw was the men in grey and their three limousines
on  the edge  of the district where the strange white buildings  began. They
were in the process of pushing their cars backwards.
     Then,  looking further afield, she saw more  grey figures  in the  city
streets.  They were talking and gesticulating excitedly as though passing on
information of some kind.
     'It's you they're talking about,' Professor Hora explained. 'They can't
understand how you managed to escape.'
     'Why  are they  all  so grey  in the face?'  Momo asked, still watching
them.
     'Because they feed on dead  matter,' the professor told her. 'They live
in people's time, as you know, but  time dies -literally dies -- once it has
been wrested away from its rightful owners. All human beings have their  own
share of time, but  it survives  only for as long as  it  really  belongs to
them.'  'So the  men in  grey aren't  human?' 'No. Their human appearance is
only  a  disguise.'  'What  are  they,  then?'  'Strictly speaking,  they're
nothing.' 'So where do they come from?'
     'They  exist only because people give  them the opportunity to  do  so.
Naturally, they  seize that opportunity.  Now that people are  giving them a
chance to rule their lives, they're naturally taking advantage of that too.'
     'What would happen if they couldn't steal any more time?'
     'They'd  disappear into  thin  air,  which  is where they  come  from.'
Professor Hora took his glasses back and pocketed  them. 'Unfortunately,' he
continued after a pause, 'they
     137
     already have plenty of human accomplices. That's the worst part.'
     'Well, nobody's going to steal any of my time,' Momo said stoutly.
     'I should hope not,' said the professor.  From one moment  to the next,
he  looked like an old man again. 'Come  along, Momo, I  want to show you my
collection.'
     Taking  her by the hand,  he led her back into the great hall, where he
showed her  all  sorts of timepieces and made them  chime for her, explained
the  workings of his sidereal clocks,  and gradually, under the influence of
his little visitor's  obvious  delight  in  all these marvels, grew  younger
again.
     Tell me,' he said as they walked on, 'do you like riddles?'
     'Oh yes, very much,' Momo said eagerly. 'Do you know any?'
     'Yes,' said Professor Hora, smiling at her, 'I know a real teaser. Very
few people can solve it.'
     'All the better,' Momo said. 'I'll make a special note  of it, so I can
try it out on my friends.'
     The professor's smile broadened. 'I  can't wait to see if you can solve
it. Listen carefully:
     All dwelling in one house are strange brothers three,
     as unlike as any three brothers could be,
     yet try as you may to tell brother from brother,
     you'll find that the trio resemble each other.
     The first isn't there, though he'll come beyond doubt.
     The second's departed, so he's not about.
     The third and the smallest is right on the spot,
     and manage without him the others could not.
     Yet the third is a factor with which to be reckoned
     because the first brother turns into the second.
     Yot" cannot stand back. and observe number three,
     for one of the others is all you will see.
     So tell me, my child, are the three of them one?
     138
     Or are there  but two? Or could  there be none? Just name them, and you
will at once realize that each  rules  a kingdom of infinite size. They rule
it together and are  it as well.  In  that, they're alike, so where  do they
dwell?'
     Professor  Hora gave Momo  an encouraging nod.  Thanks to her excellent
memory,  she was able to repeat the  whole  rhyme word for word. She did so,
slowly and carefully, then sighed.
     'Phew!' she said.  'That's a  really hard  one.  I've no idea what  the
answer could be. I don't even know where to start.'
     'Just try,' said the professor.
     Momo recited the riddle again under her breath.  Finally, she shook her
head. 'It's no use,' she said.
     The tortoise,  which  had  now rejoined  them  and  was  seated  at the
professor's feet, had been watching Momo intently.
     'Well, Cassiopeia,' said  the professor,  'you know  everything half an
hour in advance. Will Momo solve the riddle or won't she?'
     Cassiopeia's shell lit up. 'SHE WILL!' it spelled out.
     'You see?' the professor said, turning to Momo. 'You are going to solve
it. Cassiopeia has never been wrong yet.'
     Momo knit her  brow and  racked her  brains  once more. Who were  these
three  brothers that  all  lived in the same  house?  They obviously weren't
brothers in the usual sense.  In riddles,  'brothers' always meant grains of
sand or  teeth or the like - similar things, at all  events. But these three
things somehow turned into each other. What sort of things could do that?
     Looking  around  in  search  of inspiration, Momo  caught sight of  the
candles with their motionless flames. Fire turned wax into light - yes, they
were three 'brothers', but that couldn't be the answer because they were all
there at the
     139
     same time, and two  of them weren't supposed to be. What about blossom,
fruit and seed - could the answer  be something  of that kind? The more Momo
debated this possibility,  the more  promising it seemed. The  seed was  the
smallest of  the  three, it was  there  when the other two  weren't, and the
other two couldn't exist without it. But no, that wouldn't do either. A seed
was perfectly visible,  and  the  riddle  said  that anyone looking  at  the
smallest of the three brothers always saw one of the other two.
     Momo's thoughts flitted hither and  thither. She simply couldn't find a
clue that led anywhere. Still, Cassiopeia had predicted that she would solve
the riddle,  so she slowly recited it to herself for a third  time. When she
came  to  the line: 'The  first isn't there, though he'll come  beyond doubt
...' she saw Cassiopeia give her a  wink. The words 'WHAT  I KNOW  lit up on
her shell, but only for a split second.
     Professor  ®£  smiled. 'No helping, Cassiopeia,'  he said,  though  he
hadn't been looking in her direction. 'Momo can work it out all by herself.'
     Momo, who had seen the  words, began to ponder  their meaning. What was
it that Cassiopeia knew? She  knew the riddle would  be solved, but that was
no help.
     So what  else did Cassiopeia know? She  always knew what  was  going to
happen. She knew .. .
     'The future!' cried Momo.  '"The first isn't there,  though he'll  come
beyond doubt" -- that's the future!'
     Professor ®£  nodded.
     '  "The second's departed,"' Momo went on,' "so he's not  about" - that
must be the past!'
     The professor beamed at her and nodded again.
     'Now comes the hard part,' Momo  said thoughtfully. 'What can the third
brother be? He's the smallest of the three, but the  other two can't  manage
without him, and he's the only one at home.'
     140
     After another  pause for  thought,  she gave a sudden exclamation.  'Of
course! It's now -- this very moment! The past consists  of moments gone  by
and  the future of moments  to come, so neither of  them could exist without
the  present. That's it!' Her cheeks were glowing  with excitement now. 'But
what does  the next bit mean? "Yet  the  third is  a factor with which to be
reckoned, because the  first brother turns into the second ..." I suppose it
means that the present exists only because the future turns into the past.'
     She looked  at Professor Hora with dawning  amazement. 'Yes, it's true!
I'd never  looked at it  like  that before. If it  is  true, though, there's
really no such thing as the present, only past and future. Take this moment,
for instance: by the  time  I  talk about it, it's already in the past. "You
cannot stand back and observe number three, for one of the others is all you
will  see ..." I understand what that means now. I understand the rest, too,
because you could be forgiven  for thinking there was only one brother - the
present, I  mean - or only the past  or the future. Or none of them at  all,
because each of them exists only when the others do. Golly,  it's  enough to
make your head spin!'
     'But the riddle isn't finished yet,'  said the  professor. 'What's this
kingdom the brothers all rule together -- the one they themselves  £¥“
     Momo  looked  baffled.  What could it  be? What did past,  present  and
future amount to, all lumped together? She gazed around the great hall, with
its thousands upon thousands of clocks. Suddenly her face lit up.
     'Time!'  she cried,  clapping her  hands  and skipping for joy. 'That's
what it is: time!'
     'And the house the brothers live in - what would that be?'
     'The world, I suppose,' Momo replied.
     'Bravo!' said the professor, clapping in his turn. 'I congratulate you,
my girl. You're really good at solving riddles. I'm delighted.'
     141
     'Me too,'  said  Momo, secretly  wondering  why he should  be quite  so
pleased that she'd solved his riddle.
     He  showed her many other rare  and interesting things as they  resumed
their tour of the clock-filled hall, but the riddle  continued to occupy her
thoughts.
     'Tell me,' she said eventually, 'what exactly is time?'
     'You've just found that out for yourself,' the professor replied.
     'No,'  she  said,  'I  mean time  itself.  It  exists,  so  it must  be
something. What is it really?'
     The  professor  smiled. 'It would  be nice  if you worked  our your own
answer to that question too.'
     Momo  pondered for a long time. 'It exists,' she mused. 'That much I do
know, but you can't touch or hold it. Could it be something like  a perfume?
Then again, it's always passing by, so it must  come from somewhere. Perhaps
it's  like the wind - no, wait! Perhaps  it's a kind of music you just don't
hear because it's  always there.'  She paused, then  added, 'Though  I  have
heard it sometimes, I think - very faintly.'
     The professor nodded.  'I know,  that's  why I was able  to summon  you
here.'
     'But there must be more to it than that,' said Momo, still pursuing her
train of thought. 'The  music comes from far off, but I seem to hear it deep
inside me.  Perhaps time works that  way too.' She broke off, bewildered. 'I
mean,' she  said, 'like the wind making  waves in the sea.' She shrugged and
shook her head. 'I expect I'm talking nonsense.'
     'Not  at  all,' said the professor.  'I think you put  it very prettily
indeed. That's why I'm going to let you into a  secret. If you want to know,
all the time in the world comes from here - from Nowhere House, Never Lane.'
     Momo gazed at him in awe.  'I see,' she said softly. 'You mean you make
it yourself?'
     142
     The  professor  smiled again. 'No, my child, I'm  merely its custodian.
All human beings have their allotted span of time. My task is to see that it
reaches them.'
     'In that case,' said Momo, 'why not simply arrange things so they don't
have any more of it stolen by the time-thieves?'
     'I can't,' the  professor told her. 'What people  do with their time is
their  own business. They must  guard it  themselves.  I can only distribute
it.'
     Momo  looked around the great hall.  'Is  that why  you keep  all these
clocks - one for every person in the world?'
     'No,  Momo,  these  clocks  are just a  hobby  of  mine.  They're  very
imperfect copies of  something  that  everyone  carries inside him. Just  as
people  have eyes to  see light with and ears to  hear sounds  with, so they
have hearts for the  appreciation of time.  And  all the  time they  fail to
appreciate is as wasted on them as  the colours of the rainbow are wasted on
a blind person or  the nightingale's  song on a deaf one.  Some  hearts  are
unappreciative of time, I fear, though they beat like all the rest.'
     'What will happen when my heart stops beating?' Momo asked.
     'When that moment  comes,' said the professor, 'time will stop for  you
as well. Or rather, you  will retrace your  steps through time,  through all
the days and nights, months and years of your life, until you go out through
the great, round, silver gate you entered by.'
     'What will I find on the other side?'
     'The home of the music you've sometimes faintly heard  in the distance,
but by then you'll be part of it. You yourself will be a note in  its mighty
harmonies.' Professor  ®£  looked at Momo searchingly. 'But I don't suppose
that makes much sense to you, does it?'
     'Yes,'  said Momo, 'I think  so.' Then,  recalling her strange progress
along Never Lane and the way she'd lived
     143
     through everything in reverse, she asked, 'Are you Death -
     The professor  smiled.  'If people  knew the nature of death,' he  said
after a  moment's silence,  'they'd cease  to  be afraid of  it. And if they
ceased to be afraid of it, no one could rob them of their time any more.'
     'Why  not tell them,  then?'  Momo suggested. 'I already  do,' said the
professor. 'I tell them the  meaning of death  with every hour  I send them,
but  they  refuse to  listen.  They'd sooner heed  those  who frighten them.
That's another riddle in itself.'
     'I'm not frightened,' said Momo.
     Professor ®£  nodded slowly. He gave her another searching scare. Then
he  said,  'Would  you  like  to  see  where  time  comes from?' 'Yes,'  she
whispered.
     'I'll take you there,' said the professor, 'but only if you promise not
to talk or ask questions. Is that understood?'
     Momo nodded.
     Professor  Hora  stooped  and  picked  her  up. All at once, he  seemed
immensely tall  and inexpressibly old, but not as  a man grows old - more in
the manner of  an ancient tree or primeval crag. Clasping Momo with one arm,
he  covered  her eyes  with  his  other  hand, so  gently that it felt as if
snowflakes were landing on her cheeks like icy thistledown.
     Momo sensed that he was striding down a long, dark tunnel, but she felt
quite safe and utterly unafraid. At first she thought she could hear her own
heartbeats, but then  she became  more  and  more convinced  that they  were
really the echoes of the professor's footsteps.
     After what seemed a very long way, he put Momo down. His face was close
to hers  when he removed  his hand from her  eyes.  He gave her a meaningful
look and put a finger to his lips. Then he straightened up and stepped back.
Everything was bathed in a sort of golden twilight.
     144
     When her eyes became  accustomed to it, Momo saw that  she was standing
beneath a mighty dome as big as the vault of heaven itself, or  so it seemed
to her, and that the whole of this dome was made of the purest gold.
     High overhead, in the very centre of  the dome, was a  circular opening
through which a shaft of light fell straight on  to an equally circular lake
whose dark, smooth waters resembled a jet-black mirror.
     Just above  the  surface, glittering in  the  shaft of light  with  the
brilliance of a star, something was slowly and majestically moving back  and
forth. Momo saw  that  it was a  gigantic pendulum,  but one with no visible
means of  support. Apparently weightless, it soared  and  swooped  above the
mirror-smooth water with birdlike ease.
     As the  glittering pendulum  slowly  neared the  edge  of  the lake, an
enormous waterlily bud emerged from its dark depths. The closer the pendulum
came, the wider it opened, until at last it lay full-blown on the surface.
     Momo had never seen so exquisite a flower. It  was composed of  all the
colours  in the spectrum - brilliant colours such as  Momo had never dreamed
of.  While the  pendulum hovered  above  it, she became  so  absorbed in the
spectacle that she forgot  everything else. The scent alone seemed something
she had always craved without knowing what it was.
     But then, very slowly, the  pendulum swung  back, and as it did so Momo
saw  to her  dismay that the  glorious flower was beginning to  wilt.  Petal
after  petal dropped off and sank into the blackness  below. To Momo, it was
as if something unutterably dear to her were vanishing beyond recall.
     By the time the pendulum reached the centre of the lake, the flower had
completely disintegrated. At that moment,  however, a new bud arose near the
opposite shore, and  as  the pendulum  drew  nearer Momo  saw that  an  even
lovelier
     145
     blossom was beginning to unfold.  She walked around the lake to inspect
it more closely.
     This new flower was altogether different from its predecessor. Momo had
never seen such  colours  before, but  these colours  seemed richer and more
exquisite  by  far. The  petals,  too,  gave  off a different  and  far more
delicious scent, and the longer  Momo studied  them the more  marvellous  in
every detail she found them.
     But  again the  glittering pendulum swung back,  and as  it did so  the
glorious blossom  withered and sank,  petal  by  petal,  into  the dark  and
unfathomable depths of the lake.
     Slowly,  very slowly, the  pendulum proceeded on  its way, but  not  to
exactly  the same place as before.  This time it checked its swing  a little
way  further  along  the  shore, and  there,  one  pace  from  where  it had
previously paused, another bud arose and unfolded.
     To Momo  this seemed the loveliest lily of all, the flower of flowers -
a  positive miracle.  She could have wept aloud when  this  perfect blossom,
too,  began  to  fade and  subside into  the depths, but she remembered  her
promise to Professor Hora and uttered no sound.
     Meanwhile, the  pendulum had returned  to  the  opposite shore, another
pace further along, and a fresh bud broke the glassy surface.
     As  time went  by,  it dawned on Momo  that each  new  blossom differed
entirely from those that had gone before, and that it always seemed the most
beautiful of all. She wandered around the lake watching flower after  flower
unfold and die.
     Although she felt she would never tire of this spectacle, she gradually
became aware of another marvel  -  one that had  escaped her till  now:  she
could not only  see the shaft of light that streamed down from the centre of
the dome; she could hear it as well.
     146
     At first it reminded her of wind whistling  in  distant tree-tops,  but
the sound  swelled until it resembled the roar of a waterfall or the thunder
of waves breaking on a rocky shore.
     More and more clearly, Momo perceived that this  mighty sound consisted
of innumerable notes  whose  constant changes of pitch were forever  weaving
different harmonies.  It  was music, yet it was also  something else. All at
once, she recognized it as the faraway music she had sometimes faintly heard
while listening to the silence of a starry night.
     But now, as the sound became ever clearer and more glorious, she sensed
that it was the resonant shaft of light that summoned each bud from the dark
depths of the lake  and fashioned it into a flower  of unique and inimitable
beauty.
     The longer she listened, the more clearly she could make out individual
voices - not human voices, but notes such as might have been  given forth by
gold  and silver and  every  other  precious metal in existence.  And  then,
beyond them, as it were, voices of quite another kind made themselves heard,
infinitely remote yet indescribably powerful. As  they gained strength, Momo
began to distinguish  words uttered in a language she had never heard before
but could  nonetheless understand.  The sun and  moon and planets  and stars
were telling  her their own, true names, and their names signified what they
did  and how they  all combined to make  each hour-lily  flower and  fade in
turn.
     Suddenly Momo realized  that all these words were directed at her. From
where she stood to the most  distant star m  space, the entire universe  was
focused upon her like a single face of unimaginable size, looking at her and
talking to her. What overcame her then was something more than fear.
     A moment later she caught sight of Professor ®£  silently beckoning to
her. She ran  to him  and  buried her  face in his ^hest.  Taking her in his
arms, he put one hand over her eyes
     147
     as before, light as thistledown, and carried her back along the endless
tunnel. Again all seemed dark, but again she felt snug and secure.
     Once they were back  in the  little, clock-lined room, he laid her down
on the sofa.
     'Professor  ®£ ,' Momo  whispered, 'I never knew that  everyone's time
was so'  - she strove to find the  right word,  but in vain -  "so big,' she
said eventually.
     'What you've just seen and heard wasn't everyone's time,' the professor
replied, 'it was  only your own. There's a place like the one you visited in
every  living soul, but only those who let me take them there  can reach it,
nor can it be seen with ordinary eyes.'
     'So where was I?'
     'In  the depths of your own heart,' said the professor, gently stroking
her tousled hair.
     'Professor ®£ ,' she whispered  again, 'may I bring my friends  to see
you too?'
     'No,' he said, 'not yet. That isn't possible.'
     'How long can I stay with you, then?'
     'Until you feel it's time to rejoin your friends, my child.'
     'But may I tell them what the stars were saying?'
     'You may, but you won't be able to.'
     'Why not?'
     'Because, before you can, the words must take root inside you.'
     'But I want to  tell  them - all of them. I want  to sing them what the
voices sang. Then everything would come right again, I think.'
     'If that's what you really want, Momo, you must learn to wait.'
     'I don't mind waiting.'
     '1 mean, wait like  a seed that must slumber in the earth before it can
sprout. That's how long the words will  take to grow  up inside you. Is that
what you want?'
     148
     'Yes,' she whispered.
     'Then sleep,'  said Professor ®£ , gently passing his  hand across her
eyes. 'Sleep!'
     And Momo heaved a deep, contented sigh and fell asleep.
         * PART THREE * 
     The Hour-Lilies
        THIRTEEN
     A Year and a Day
     Momo awoke and opened her eyes.
     It was a while before she  gathered where she was. To her bewilderment,
she found  herself back  on the grass-grown steps  of  the amphitheatre.  If
she'd been with Professor Hora in Nowhere House only moments before, how had
she made her way back here so quickly?
     It was cold and dark, with the  first  light of dawn just showing above
the  eastern  skyline. Momo  shivered  and  burrowed  deeper  into her baggy
jacket.
     She  had  a vivid recollection of all  that had  happened:  of trudging
through the city  behind the tortoise, of the district with the strange glow
and the dazzling white houses, of Never Lane and  the great hall filled with
clocks,  of  hot  chocolate and  rolls and honey,  of her conversation  with
Professor Hora. She could even recall the riddle,  word for word. Above all,
though, she recalled what she had witnessed beneath the golden dome. She had
only  to  shut her eyes  to  see the  hour-lilies in all  their undreamed-of
splendour. As for the voices of the sun,  moon and stars, they still rang in
her ears so clearly that she could hum the melodies they sang.
     And  while she did so, words  took shape within  her -words  that truly
described the  scent  of  the flowers  and the  colours  she  had never seen
before. It was  the voices  in her memory  that  spoke them, yet the  memory
itself brought something wonderful in its  train. Momo found that she  could
recall not only what she  had seen and heard  but much,  much  more