Good Omens (38 page)

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Authors: Neil Gaiman

BOOK: Good Omens
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Pollution plunged his hands into another rack of expensive electronics.

THE GUARD ON THE HOLE in the fence looked puzzled. He was aware of excitement back in the base, and his radio seemed to be picking up nothing but static, and his eyes were being drawn again and again to the card in front of him.

He'd seen many identity cards in his time—military, CIA, FBI, KGB even—and, being a young soldier, had yet to grasp that the more insignificant an organization is, the more impressive are its identity cards.

This one was
hellishly
impressive. His lips moved as he read it again, all the way from “The Lord Protector of the Common Wealth of Britain charges and demands,” through the bit about commandeering all kindling, rope, and igniferous oils, right down to the signature of the WA's first Lord Adjutant, Praise-him-all-Ye-works-of-the-Lord-and-Flye-Fornication Smith. Newt kept his thumb over the bit about Nine Pence Per Witch and tried to look like James Bond.

Finally the guard's probing intellect found a word he thought he recognized.

“What's this here,” he said suspiciously, “about us got to give you faggots?”

“Oh, we have to have them,” said Newt. “We burn them.”

“Say what?”

“We burn them.”

The guard's face broadened into a grin. And they'd told him England was soft. “Right on!” he said.

Something pressed into the small of his back.

“Drop your gun,” said Anathema, behind him, “or I shall regret what I shall have to do next.”

Well, it's true, she thought as she saw the man stiffen in terror. If he doesn't drop the gun he'll find out this is a stick, and I shall really regret having to be shot.

AT THE MAIN GATE, Sgt. Thomas A. Deisenburger was also having problems. A little man in a dirty mack kept pointing a finger at him and muttering, while a lady who looked slightly like his mother talked to him in urgent tones and kept interrupting herself in a different voice.

“It really is vitally important that we are allowed to speak to whoever is in charge,”
said Aziraphale.
“I really must ask that
he's right, you know, I'd be able to tell if he was lying
yes, thank you, I think we'd really achieve something if you kindly allowed me to carry on
all right
thank you
I was only trying to put in a good word
Yes! Er
. You were asking him to
yes, all right … now—

“D'yer see my finger?” shouted Shadwell, whose sanity was still attached to him but only on the end of a long and rather frayed string. “D'yer see it? This finger, laddie, could send ye to meet yer Maker!”

Sgt. Deisenburger stared at the black and purple nail a few inches from his face. As an offensive weapon it rated quite highly, especially if it was ever used in the preparation of food.

The telephone gave him nothing but static. He'd been told not to leave his post. His wound from Nam was starting to play up.
54
He wondered how much trouble he could get into for shooting non-American civilians.

THE FOUR BICYCLES pulled up a little way from the base. Tire marks in the dust, and a patch of oil, indicated that other travelers had briefly rested there.

“What're we stopping for?” said Pepper.

“I'm thinking,” said Adam.

It was hard. The bit of his mind that he knew as
himself
was still there, but it was trying to stay afloat on a fountain of tumultuous darkness. What he was aware of, though, was that his three companions were one hundred percent human. He'd got them into trouble before, in the way of torn clothes, docked pocket money, and so on, but this one was almost certainly going to involve a lot more than being confined to the house and made to tidy up your room.

On the other hand, there wasn't anyone else.

“All right,” he said. “We need some stuff, I think. We need a sword, a crown, and some scales.”

They stared at him.

“What, just here?” said Brian. “There's nothin' like that here.”

“I dunno,” said Adam. “When you think about the games and that, you know, we've played … ”

JUST TO MAKE SGT. DEISENBURGER'S day, a car pulled up and it was floating several inches off the ground because it had no tires. Or paintwork. What it did have was a trail of blue smoke, and when it stopped it made the
pinging
noises made by metal cooling down from a very high temperature.

It looked as if it had smoked glass windows, although this was just an effect caused by it having ordinary glass windows but a smoke-filled interior.

The driver's door opened, and a cloud of choking fumes got out. Then Crowley followed it.

He waved the smoke away from his face, blinked, and then turned the gesture into a friendly wave.

“Hi,” he said. “How's it going? Has the world ended yet?”

“He won't let us in, Crowley
,” said Madame Tracy.

“Aziraphale? Is that you? Nice dress,” said Crowley vaguely. He wasn't feeling very well. For the last thirty miles he had been imagining that a ton of burning metal, rubber, and leather was a fully functioning automobile, and the Bentley had been resisting him fiercely. The hard part had been to keep the whole thing rolling after the all-weather radials had burned away. Beside him the remains of the Bentley dropped suddenly onto its distorted wheel rims as he stopped imagining that it had tires.

He patted a metal surface hot enough to fry eggs on.

“You wouldn't get that sort of performance out of one of these modern cars,” he said lovingly.

They stared at him.

There was a little electronic click.

The gate was rising. The housing that contained the electric motor gave a mechanical groan, and then gave up in the face of the unstoppable force acting on the barrier.

“Hey!” said Sgt. Deisenburger, “Which one of you yo-yos did that?”

Zip. Zip. Zip. Zip
. And a small dog, its legs a blur.

They stared at the four ferociously pedaling figures that ducked under the barrier and disappeared into the camp.

The sergeant pulled himself together.

“Hey,” he said, but much more weakly this time, “did any of them kids have some space alien with a face like a friendly turd in a bike basket?”

“Don't think so,” said Crowley.

“Then,” said Sgt. Deisenburger, “they're in real trouble.” He raised his gun. Enough of this pussyfooting around; he kept thinking of soap. “And so,” he said, “are you.”

“I warns ye—” Shadwell began.

“This has gone on too long,”
said Aziraphale.
“Sort it out, Crowley, there's a dear chap
.”

“Hmm?” said Crowley.

“I'm the nice one,”
said Aziraphale.
“You can't expect me to—oh, blast it. You try to do the decent thing, and where does it get you?
” He snapped his fingers.

There was a pop like an old-fashioned flashbulb, and Sgt. Thomas A. Deisenburger disappeared.

“Er
,” said Aziraphale.

“See?” said Shadwell, who hadn't quite got the hang of Madame Tracy's split personality. “Nothing to it. Ye stick by me, ye'll be all right.”

“Well done,” said Crowley. “Never thought you had it in you.”

“No,”
said Aziraphale.
“Nor did I, in fact. I do hope I haven't sent him somewhere dreadful
.”

“You'd better get used to it right now,” said Crowley. “You just send 'em. Best not to worry about where they go.” He looked fascinated. “Aren't you going to introduce me to your new body?”

“Oh? Yes. Yes, of course. Madame Tracy, this is Crowley. Crowley, Madame Tracy
. Charmed, I'm sure.”

“Let's get on in,” said Crowley. He looked sadly at the wreckage of the Bentley, and then brightened. A jeep was heading purposefully towards the gate, and it looked as though it was crowded with people who were about to shout questions and fire guns and not worry about which order they did this in.

He brightened up. This was more what you might call his area of competence.

He took his hands out of his pockets and he raised them like Bruce Lee and then he smiled like Lee van Cleef. “Ah,” he said, “here comes transport.”

THEY PARKED THEIR BIKES outside one of the low buildings. Wensleydale carefully locked his. He was that kind of boy.

“So what will these people look like?” said Pepper.

“They could look like all sorts,” said Adam doubtfully.

“They're grownups, are they?” said Pepper.

“Yes,” said Adam. “More grown-up than you've ever seen before, I reckon.”

“Fightin' grownups is never any use,” said Wensleydale gloomily. “You always get into trouble.”

“You don't have to fight 'em,” said Adam. “You just do what I told you.”

The Them looked at the things they were carrying. As far as tools to mend the world were concerned, they did not look incredibly efficient.

“How'll we find 'em, then?” said Brian, doubtfully. “I remember when we came to the Open Day, it's all rooms and stuff. Lots of rooms and flashing lights.”

Adam stared thoughtfully at the buildings. The alarms were still yodeling.

“Well,” he said, “it seems to
me
—”

“Hey, what are you kids doing here?”

It wasn't a one hundred percent threatening voice, but it was near the end of its tether and it belonged to an officer who'd spent ten minutes trying to make sense of a senseless world where alarms went off and doors didn't open. Two equally harassed soldiers stood behind him, slightly at a loss as to how to deal with four short and clearly Caucasian juveniles, one of them marginally female.

“Don't you worry about us,” said Adam airily. “We're jus' lookin' around.”

“Now you just—” the lieutenant began.

“Go to sleep,” said Adam. “You just go to sleep. All you soldiers here go to sleep. Then you won't get hurt. You all just go to sleep
now
.”

The lieutenant stared at him, his eyes trying to focus. Then he pitched forward.

“Coo,” said Pepper, as the others collapsed, “how did you do that?”

“Well,” said Adam cautiously, “you know that bit about hypnotism in the
Boy's Own Book of 101 Things To Do
that we could never make work?”

“Yes?”

“Well, it's sort of like that, only now I've found how to do it.” He turned back to the communications building.

He pulled himself together, his body unfolding from its habitual comfortable slouch into an upright bearing Mr. Tyler would have been proud of.

“Right,” he said.

He thought for a while.

Then he said, “Come and see.”

IF YOU TOOK THE WORLD away and just left the electricity, it would look like the most exquisite filigree ever made—a ball of twinkling silver lines with the occasional coruscating spike of a satellite beam. Even the dark areas would glow with radar and commercial radio waves. It could be the nervous system of a great beast.

Here and there cities make knots in the web but most of the electricity is, as it were, mere musculature, concerned only with crude work. But for fifty years or so people had been giving electricity brains.

And now it was alive, in the same way that fire is alive. Switches were welding shut. Relays fused. In the heart of silicon chips whose microscopic architecture looked like a street plan of Los Angeles fresh pathways opened up, and hundreds of miles away bells rang in underground rooms and men stared in horror at what certain screens were telling them. Heavy steel doors shut firmly in secret hollow mountains, leaving people on the other side to pound on them and wrestle with fuse boxes which had melted. Bits of desert and tundra slid aside, letting fresh air into air-conditioned tombs, and blunt shapes ground ponderously into position.

And while it flowed where it should not, it ebbed from its normal beds. In cities the traffic lights went, then the street lights, then all the lights. Cooling fans slowed, flickered, and stopped. Heaters faded into darkness. Lifts stuck. Radio stations choked off, their soothing music silenced.

It has been said that civilization is twenty-four hours and two meals away from barbarism.

Night was spreading slowly around the spinning Earth. It should have been full of pinpricks of light. It was not.

There were five billion people down there. What was going to happen soon would make barbarism look like a picnic—hot, nasty, and eventually given over to the ants.

DEATH STRAIGHTENED UP. He appeared to be listening intently. It was anyone's guess what he listened with.

HE IS HERE, he said.

The other three looked up. There was a barely perceptible change in the way they stood there. A moment before Death had spoken
they
, the part of them that did not walk and talk like human beings, had been wrapped around the world. Now they were back.

More or less.

There was a strangeness about them. It was as if, instead of ill-fitting suits, they now had ill-fitting bodies. Famine looked as though he had been tuned slightly off-station, so that the hitherto dominant signal—of a pleasant, thrusting, successful businessman—was beginning to be drowned out by the ancient, horrible static of his basic personality. War's skin glistened with sweat. Pollution's skin just glistened.

“It's all … taken care of,” said War, speaking with some effort. “It'll … take its course.”

“It's not just the nuclear,” Pollution said. “It's the chemical. Thousands of gallons of stuff in … little tanks all over the world. Beautiful liquids … with eighteen syllables in their names. And the … old standbys. Say what you like. Plutonium may give you grief for thousands of years, but arsenic is forever.”

“And then … winter,” said Famine. “I
like
winter. There's something …
clean
about winter.”

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