have been
ice,  leaves falling from trees were suspended  in mid-air,  and  one little
dog, which was cocking its leg against a lamp-post, looked as if it had been
stuffed that way.
     Lifeless as  a photograph, the city rang to  the  hurrying footsteps of
the men in grey. Momo  followed  them cautiously, fearful of  being spotted,
but she needn't have  worried. Their headlong flight was  proving so arduous
and exhausting that they had ceased to notice anything any more.
     Unaccustomed to running so  far and so fast, they panted and gasped for
breath, grimly clenching their  teeth  on the  little grey cigars that  kept
them in  existence. More than  one of them  let his cigar fall while running
and vanished into thin air before he could retrieve it.
     But their  companions in misfortune represented an even greater threat.
Such was the desperation of those whose own cigars were almost finished that
many  of them snatched  the butts from  their neighbours' mouths,  so  their
numbers slowly but steadily dwindled.
     Those who still had a small store of  cigars in  their briefcases  were
careful  to conceal them from the others, because the have-nots kept hurling
themselves at the haves and  trying to wrest their precious possessions from
them.  Scores of struggling figures engaged in ferocious tussles, scrabbling
and clawing with such wild  abandon that most of  the coveted cigars spilled
on to the road and were trampled underfoot.
     223
     The  men in  grey  had  become so frightened  of  extinction that  they
completely lost their heads.
     There  was  something  else that caused them  increasing difficulty the
further into town they got. The streets  were so crowded at many points that
it  was  all  they  could  do  to  thread  their  way through  the forest of
motionless  pedestrians. Momo, being small  and thin, had an easier time  of
it, but even she had to watch her  step. You could  hurt yourself badly on a
feather suspended in mid-air if you ran into it by mistake.
     On and on they went, and Momo still had no idea how much further it was
to the time store. She  peered  anxiously  at her hour-lily, but it had only
just come into full flower. There was no need to worry yet.
     Then something happened that temporarily drove every other thought from
her mind. Glancing down a side street, she caught sight of Beppo!
     'Beppo!' she called, beside herself with joy, as  she  ran towards him.
'I've been looking  for you everywhere. Where have  you  been all this time?
Why did you never come to see me? Oh, Beppo, dearest Beppo!'
     Still ck'tching  Cassiopeia, she flung her free arm around  his neck --
and promptly bounced off,  because he might have  been made of cast iron. It
was  such  a painful collision that tears  sprang to  her  eyes. She stepped
back, sobbing, and gazed at him.
     The  little old man looked more bent-backed than  ever. His kindly face
was thin  and  gaunt and very  pale,  and  his chin was  frosted with  white
stubble because  he  so  seldom found the time  to shave nowadays. Incessant
sweeping had worn away his  broom until the bristles were little longer than
his  beard. There  he stood, as  motionless as everyone and everything else,
staring down at the dirty street through his steel-rimmed spectacles.
     Momo had found him at last, but only now, when she couldn't get him  to
notice her and it might be the very last
     224
     time she saw  him. If things went wrong, old  Beppo  would continue  to
stand there forever more.
     Cassiopeia started fidgeting again. 'KEEP GOING!' she spelled out.
     Momo dashed back to the main street and stopped dead. There were no men
in grey to be seen! She ran on  a little way, but it was no use,  she'd lost
track  of  them.  She  halted  again,  wondering  what  to  do,  and  looked
inquiringly at Cassiopeia.
     'KEEP GOING,' the tortoise signaled again, then:
     •YOU'LL FIND THEM.'
     If Cassiopeia knew in advance that she would find the time-thieves, she
would  find them whichever way she  went. Any direction was  bound to be the
right one,  so  she simply  ran on, turning left or  right as the fancy took
her.
     She  had now reached  the  housing development  on  the city's northern
outskirts,  where the  buildings were  as alike  as peas  in  a pod  and the
streets ran dead  straight from  horizon to  horizon. On and on she ran, but
the sheer sameness of the buildings and streets soon made her feel as if she
were running on the spot and getting nowhere.  The housing development was a
veritable  maze,  but  a  maze  that  deceived  one  by its  regularity  and
uniformity.
     Momo  had almost lost  hope  when  she  caught sight  of a  man in grey
disappearing around a corner. He was limping ..long with his suit in tatters
and  his bowler  hat  and  briefcase  gone,  mouth grimly  pursed around the
smouldering butt of a little grey cigar.
     She followed him along a street flanked by endless rows of houses until
they came to a gap. The big rectangular site where the missing house  should
have stood was boarded up, and set  in the fence  was a gate. The gate was a
little ajar, and the last grey straggler squeezed quickly through it.
     There was a notice above the gate. Momo paused to read it.
     225
     DANGER!
     KEEP OUT!
     NO UNAUTHORIZED
     PERSONS ADMITTED
        TWENTY-ONE
     An End and a Beginning
     Momo  took  several  seconds  to  decipher  the  longer  words  on  the
noticeboard, and  by the  time she slipped through the gate  the last of the
men in grey had disappeared.
     In front of her yawned a gigantic pit, eighty or ninety feet deep, with
bulldozers and excavators around it. Several trucks had stopped mid way down
the  ramp that led to  the bottom of the pit and  construction workers  were
standing motionless all over the place, frozen in a variety of positions.
     Where  to now? There was no  sign of the man in the grey and no clue as
to where he might have gone. Cassiopeia  seemed equally at a loss. Her shell
did not light up.
     Momo made her way down  the ramp to the  bottom  of  the pit and looked
around.  Suddenly she saw a familiar face. It was  Salvatore, the bricklayer
who had painted the pretty flower picture on the wall of her room. He was as
motionless  as  all the rest, but something about his  pose made Momo  think
twice. He was cupping his mouth as though calling to someone and pointing to
the rim of a huge  pipe jutting  from the  ground beside him, almost  as  if
drawing Memo's attention to it.
     Momo  wasted no time.  Taking this as a good omen,  she hurried over to
the  pipe  and climbed inside. She lost  her footing almost at once, because
the pipe sloped downwards at a steep  angle, twisting and turning so sharply
that  she slithered back  and forth like a child  on  a  helter-skelter. She
could see  and hear  almost  nothing  as she  hurtled  ever deeper into  the
ground, sometimes sliding on her bottom, sometimes
     227
     rolling head over heels, but never  letting go of the tortoise and  the
hour-lily.
     The deeper she  went, the colder it became. She began to wonder how she
would  ever get out  again, but before she could  give the problem  any real
thought the pipe abruptly ended in an underground passage. It wasn't as dark
here. The tunnel was bathed in a grey twilight that seemed to ooze from  its
very walls. Momo scrambled up  and ran on. Her bare  feet made no sound, but
she could hear  footsteps ahead of  her. Guessing that  they belonged to the
men in grey,  she  allowed  herself to be guided  by them. To  judge by  the
innumerable passages  leading off  her  own  in all directions, she was in a
maze of tunnels that ran the full extent of the housing development.
     Then  she heard a  babble  of  voices. Having traced  the hubbub to its
source, she cautiously peeped around the corner.
     She found  herself  looking  at  a room as vast as the conference table
that ran down the middle of it, and at this table, in two long rows, sat the
surviving  men  in  grey. Momo almost  felt sorry for  them, they  looked so
woebegone. Their suits were torn, their bald grey heads cut and bruised, and
their faces convulsed with fear, but their cigars were still smouldering.
     Embedded in the wall at the far end of the  room, Momo saw a huge steel
door. The door was ajar, and  an icy draught was streaming from whatever lay
beyond. Although Momo knew  it would  do little good, she  burrowed down and
tucked her bare feet under her skirt.
     A  man in grey was presiding  at the head of the conference table, just
in front of the  strong-room  door. 'We must economize,' Momo heard him say.
'Our reserves must be carefully husbanded. After all, we don't know how long
they'll have to last us.'
     'There's only a handful of  us  left,' cried  someone. 'They'll last us
for years.'
     228
     'The sooner we start economizing,'  the chairman went on imperturbably,
'the longer we'll hold out. I don't have to tell you, gentlemen, what I mean
by economizing. It will be quite sufficient if only some of us survive  this
disaster. Let's face facts. As  things stand now, there are far too many  of
us.  Common sense dictates that our ranks be drastically thinned. May  I ask
you to call out numbers in turn?'
     When  the  men in grey had called out numbers, all round the table, the
chairman produced a coin from  his pocket. 'I  shall  now toss up,' he said.
'Heads mean the even numbers survive, tails the odd numbers.' He flipped the
coin and caught it.
     'Heads,' he announced. 'Even numbers may remain seated, odd numbers are
requested to dissolve forthwith.'
     The losers emitted a dull groan, but none of them  demurred. As soon as
the winners had relieved them of their cigars, they vanished into thin air.
     The chairman's voice broke the hush. 'And now, gentlemen, kindly do the
same again.'
     The  same gruesome procedure was followed a second  time,  then a third
and a fourth, until only half a dozen men in grey  remained. They sat at the
head of the conference table,  three a side, and glared at each other in icy
silence.
     Momo, who  had watched these  developments with  horrified fascination,
noticed that the temperature rose appreciably  every time another  batch  of
losers disappeared. Compared to what  it had been before, the cold was quite
tolerable.
     'Six,' remarked one of the survivors, 'is an unlucky number.'
     'That's enough,'  said  another.  'There's no  point  in  reducing  our
numbers  still further. If six  of  us can't  survive this disaster, neither
will three.'
     'Not  necessarily,' said someone  else, 'but  we can always  review the
situation if the need arises - later, I mean.'
     229
     No one spoke for a while. Then another survivor said, 'Lucky for us the
door to the time store was open when disaster struck. If it had been shut at
the crucial moment, no power on earth  could open it now. We'd be absolutely
sunk.'
     'You're not  entirely right, I'm afraid,' replied another. 'Because the
door is open, cold is escaping from the refrigeration plant. The hour-lilies
will slowly thaw out, and you all know what'll happen then. We won't be able
to prevent them from returning to their original owners.'
     'You  mean,'  said  yet  another,  'that  our  own  coldness  won't  be
sufficient to keep them deep-frozen?'
     'There are only  six of us,  unfortunately,'  said  the second speaker.
'You can calculate our freezing capability for yourself. Personally, I  feel
it was rather rash to  cut  down our numbers so drastically. It  hasn't paid
off.'
     'We  had  to opt  for one  course of action or the other,'  snapped the
first speaker, 'and we did, so that's that.'
     Another silence fell.
     'In other words,'  said someone, 'we may have to sit  here for years on
end,  twiddling our thumbs and gawping  at  each other. I find that a dismal
prospect, I must confess.'
     Momo racked  her brains. There was  certainly no  point in  her sitting
there  and  waiting  any  longer.  When  the men  in  grey  were  gone,  the
hour-lilies would thaw  out by themselves, but the men in grey still existed
and would continue  to  exist unless  she  did something about it.  But what
could  she  do, given  that  the door  to the  cold store  was open  and the
time-thieves could help themselves to fresh supplies of cigars whenever they
wanted?
     At that moment, Cassiopeia nudged her in the ribs. Momo looked down and
saw a message on her shell. 'SHUT THF. DOOR,' she read.
     'I can't,' she whispered back. 'I'd never move it.'
     'USE THE FLOWER,' Cassiopeia replied.
     230
     'You mean  I  could  move  it  if  I touched it  with  the  hour-lily?'
whispered Momo.
     'YES, AND YOU WILL,' the tortoise spelled out.
     If Cassiopeia knew this  in advance, it had to  be true. Momo carefully
put the tortoise down. Then she took the hour-lily, which was wilting by now
and had lost most of its petals, and stowed it inside her jacket.
     Going down  on  all fours, she  sneaked  unseen  beneath the conference
table and crawled  to the far end. By the time she was  on a  level with the
time-thieves' six pairs of legs, her heart was pounding fit to burst.
     Very, very gingerly, she took out the hour-lily and,  gripping the stem
between  her  teeth, crawled on.  Still  unobserved by  the men in grey, she
reached the open door, touched it with the hour-lily and simultaneously gave
it a  push.  The well-oiled  hinges  didn't  make a  sound.  The  door swung
silently  to,  then shut with  a mighty clang that  went  echoing around the
conference chamber and  reverberated  from  the  walls  of  the  innumerable
underground passages.
     Momo jumped to her feet.  The men in grey, who hadn't the remotest idea
that  anyone  but themselves was  exempt from the universal  standstill, sat
rooted to their chairs in horror, staring at her.
     Without a second thought, she dashed past them and sprinted back to the
exit. The men in grey recovered from their shock and raced after her.
     'It's that frightful  little girl!' she heard  one of them shout. 'It's
Momo!'
     'Impossible!' yelled  another. 'The  creature's  moving!' 'She's got an
hour-lily!'  bellowed  a  third. Is that  how  she moved the  door?' asked a
fourth.  The fifth  smote his brow. 'Then we could have moved  it ourselves.
We've got plenty of hour-lilies.'
     'We did have, you mean!' screamed the sixth. 'Only one
     231
     thing  can save  us  now that the door's shut.  If we don't get hold of
that flower of hers, we're done for!'
     Meanwhile,  Momo had already disappeared into the  maze of tunnels. The
men in grey knew their way around better, of course, but she just managed to
elude them by zigzagging to and fro.
     Cassiopeia played her own special pan in this chase. Although she could
only crawl, she always knew  in advance where Momo's pursuers would go next,
so she got there  in good time and stationed  herself in their path. The men
in grey tripped over  her and  went  sprawling, and  the ones behind tripped
over them and went  sprawling too, with the result that  she more than  once
saved Momo from almost certain capture. Although  she herself was often sent
hurtling  against  walls  by  flying  feet,  nothing could  deter  her  from
continuing to do what she knew in advance she would do.
     As the chase proceeded, several  of the pursuing men in grey  became so
maddened by their craving for the hour-lily that they  dropped  their cigars
and vanished  into thin air, one after the  other. In the end, only two were
left.
     Momo doubled back and took  refuge in the  conference chamber.  The two
surviving  time-thieves chased her around the table but failed to catch her,
so they split up  and ran in opposite directions. Momo was trapped  at last.
She  cowered  in  a  corner  and  gazed at her pursuers  in terror with  the
hour-lily clasped to her chest. All  but three of its shimmering  petals had
withered and fallen.
     The foremost man in grey was just  about to snatch the flower  when the
other one yanked him away.
     'No,' he shrieked, 'that flower's mine! Mine, I tell you!'
     They grappled with each  other, and in the  ensuing scrimmage the first
man knocked the second man's cigar out of his mouth. With a weird groan, the
second man spun around, went transparent and vanished.
     The last of the men in grey advanced on Momo with a
     232
     minuscule cigar butt smouldering in the corner of his mouth.
     'Give it here!' he gasped, but  as he did so  the butt fell out  of his
mouth and rolled away under the table.  He flung  himself to the ground  and
groped  for it, but it eluded  his outstretched fingers.  Turning his  ashen
face  towards  Momo,  he  struggled into  a sitting position and  raised one
trembling hand.
     'Please,'  he  whispered  faintly,  'please, dear  child, give  me  the
flower.'
     Momo,  still  cowering in her  corner,  couldn't get  a word  out.  She
clasped the flower still tighter and shook her head.
     The last of  the men  in grey nodded slowly. 'I'm glad,'  he  murmured.
'I'm glad ... it's all ... over ...' Then he vanished, too.
     Momo was staring dazedly at the place where he had been when Cassiopeia
crawled into view. 'YOU'LL OPEN THE DOOR,' her shell announced.
     Momo went over  to the door, touched  it with her  hour-lily, which had
only one last petal left, and opened it wide.
     The  time  store  was  cold  no  longer,  now  that  the  last  of  the
time-thieves had gone.  Momo  marvelled at the  contents of the  huge vault.
Innumerable hour-lilies were arrayed  on  its  endless  shelves like crystal
goblets, no two  alike and each more beautiful  than the  other. Hundreds of
thousands, indeed, millions of  hours  were  stored here, all of them stolen
from people's lives.
     The  temperature  steadily  rose  until  the vault  was  as  hot  as  a
greenhouse. Just as  the last petal  of Momo's  hour-lily  fluttered  to the
ground, all the  other  flowers left  their  shelves in clouds  and  swirled
around  her head.  It was like a warm spring storm, bur  a storm made  up of
time released from captivity.
     As if  in a  dream, Momo looked around and saw Cassiopeia on the ground
beside her.  The glowing  letters  on her shell read:  'FLY HOME,  MOMO, FLY
HOME!' That was the last Momo ever saw of Cassiopeia, because
     233
     the tempest of flowers rose to an indescribable pitch. And as it gained
strength,  so Momo  was lifted off her  feet  and borne  away like  a flower
herself, along  the dark passages,  out into the open air and high above the
city. Soaring  over the roofs in  a cloud of flowers  that grew bigger every
moment,  she  was wafted up  and down and  around  and  around  like someone
performing a triumphal dance to glorious music.
     Then  the cloud of flowers drifted slowly, lazily down and  landed like
snowflakes  on  the  frozen face of  the  earth. And, like snowflakes,  they
gently dissolved and became invisible as they returned to their true home in
the hearts of mankind.
     In that same moment, time began again and everything awoke to new life.
The cars drove  on, the traffic  police  blew their  whistles,  the  pigeons
continued circling, and the little  dog made a puddle against the lamp-post.
Nobody noticed that  time  had stood  still for an hour, because nothing had
moved in the interval. It was all over in the twinkling of an eye.
     Nothing  had moved - no,  but something had changed. All of  a  sudden,
people  found  they  had  plenty of time  to  spare.  They  were  delighted,
naturally,  but  they never  realized that  it was  their own time that  had
miraculously been restored to them.
     When Momo came to her senses again, she found herself back in  the side
street  where she had last seen Beppo. Sure enough, there he was, leaning on
his broom with his back to her, gazing ruminatively into the distance  as he
used to in the old days. He wasn't in a hurry any more, and for some unknown
reason he felt brighter and more hopeful.
     'I wonder,' he thought. 'Maybe I've already saved the  hundred thousand
hours I need to ransom Momo.'
     At that moment, someone tugged at  his jacket and he turned to see Momo
smiling up at him as large as life.
     There are no words to describe the joy of that reunion.
     234
     Beppo and Momo laughed and  cried by turns, and they both kept  talking
at once -  talking all  kinds  of nonsense, too, as  people  do when they're
dazed with delight.  They hugged each other again and again,  and passers-by
paused to share in their happiness, their  tears and laughter,  because they
all had plenty of time to spare.
     At long last,  Beppo shouldered his broom - he took the rest of the day
off, of course - and the two of them strolled arm in arm through the city to
the old amphitheatre, still talking nineteen to the dozen.
     It was a  long time since the city had witnessed  such scenes. Children
played in the middle of the street, getting in the way of cars whose drivers
not  only watched and  waited, smiling  broadly,  but sometimes  got out and
joined in their games. People stood around chatting with the friendliness of
those who  take a  genuine  interest  in  their  neighbours'  welfare. Other
people,  on their way to work, had time to stop and admire the  flowers in a
window-box  or feed the birds. Doctors,  too,  had time to devote themselves
properly to their patients, and  workers  of all kinds did  their jobs  with
pride and loving care, now that they were no longer expected to turn out  as
much work as possible in the shortest possible time. They could take as much
time as they needed and  wanted, because  from  now on there was enough time
for everyone.
     Many people never discovered whom  they had to thank for all this, just
as they never knew what had actually happened during the hour that passed in
a flash. Few of them would have believed the story anyway.
     The  only ones that knew and  believed it were  Memo's  friends. By the
time Momo and Beppo reached the amphitheatre, they were  all there  waiting:
Guido, Paolo, Massimo, Franco, Maria and her little sister Rosa, Claudio and
a host of other children, Nino the innkeeper and his plump wife  Liliana and
their  baby, Salvatore the bricklayer, and all of Memo's regular visitors in
days gone by.
     235
     The  celebration that followed, which was as  merry and joyous as  only
Momo's friends could have made it, went on till the stars came out. And when
all  the cheers and hugs and handshakes  and  excited chatter  had subsided,
everyone sat down on the grass-grown steps.
     A great hush fell as Momo stepped out into the middle of the arena. She
thought of the music of the stars and the hour-lilies, and then, in a sweet,
pure voice, she began to sing.
     Meanwhile, in Nowhere House, the  return  of time  had roused Professor
¨®£  from his first sleep ever. Still very pale, he looked as if he had just
recovered from  a serious  illness, but his  eyes sparkled and there  was  a
smile on his lips  as he watched Momo and her friends through his omnivision
glasses.
     Then he  felt something touch  his  foot.  Taking  off his glasses,  he
looked down and saw Cassiopeia sitting there.
     'Cassiopeia,' he said, tickling her affectionately under the chin, 'the
two of you did a  fine job. I couldn't watch you, for once, so you must tell
me all about it.'
     'LATER,' the tortoise signalled. Then she sneezed.
     The professor looked concerned. 'You haven't caught cold, have you?'
     'YOU BET I HAVE!' replied Cassiopeia.
     'You must have gone  too close to the men in grey,' said the professor.
'I expect you're very  tired, too. We can talk later. Better go off and have
a good sleep first.'
     'THANKS,' came the answer.
     Cassiopeia limped off  and picked  herself a nice,  dark, quiet corner.
She tucked her head and legs in, and very slowly, in letters visible only to
those who have read this story, her shell spelled out two words:
     THE END
     AUTHOR'S POSTSCRIPT
     Many of my  readers may  have questions they'd like to  ask. If so, I'm
afraid I can't help  them. The fact is, I wrote this story down from memory,
just as it was  told  me.  I never met Momo or any  of her friends, nor do I
know what became of them  or how they are today. As for  the city where they
lived, I can only guess which one it was. The most I can tell you is this.
     One night in a train,  while I was on a long journey (as I still am), I
found myself sitting opposite a remarkable fellow passenger -- remarkable in
that I found it quite impossible to tell his age. At first I put him down as
an  old  man, but  I soon  saw  that I must have been  mistaken,  because he
suddenly seemed very young - though that impression, too,  soon proved to be
false.
     At any  rate, it was he who told me the story  during our  long night's
journey together.
     Neither of  us  spoke for some moments after he had finished.  Then  my
mysterious  acquaintance made a remark which I feel  bound to put on record.
'I've described all these events,' he  said, 'as if they'd already happened.
I might just as well have described them as if they still lay in the future.
To me, there's very little difference.'
     He must have  left the train at  the  next  station, because  I noticed
after a while that I was alone.
     I've never bumped into him again, unfortunately. If by any chance I do,
though, I shall have plenty of questions to ask him myself.