Read Charlie and the War Against the Grannies Online
Authors: Alan Brough
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She reached into her backpack again and pulled out another plastic squirty bottle and handed it to me.
It was maple syrup.
âWhy do I get maple syrup?' I said.
âHuuuvvv oooo uuvvvaa bun squuuttteedd unnn thhu uuyyyuuz whhuuutth muupppl zyzuuuppp?'
âNo, I've never been squirted with maple syrup,' I said.
âUutttt ruuuuly stuuuunngz!'
We waited behind the letterbox. Hils had her bottle of chilli sauce ready. I had my bottle of maple syrup ready.
Then we heard them.
âThe grannies are coming,' I said.
âUfffuuurrrmmmutuuuuv!' said Hils.
âHils, I've never fired a maple syrup bottle before. What do I do?'
The grannies were getting closer.
âJuuuzzzttt ppuuuunnnttt uunnd sqquuuuuzzzz.'
âHils. Take your gas mask off. This is silly.'
She took off her gas mask.
âNo. I won't take my gas mask off,' she said and then put her gas mask back on.
I wished I had a gas mask. Maybe the grannies possessed chemical weapons.
That was not a comforting thought to be thinking, especially because it sounded like the grannies were almost right in front of where we were hiding.
âRuuuddddyy?' said Hils.
âNo,' I said.
The grannies stopped.
âUuuunnnn tthhhuuu cccuuuunnnn uuvvv thhhuuuuuvvv.'
âWhat? What are we going to do on the count of three?'
âUuunnnn.'
âWhat are we going to do?'
âOooooooo.'
âHils. Tell me. What are we going to do?'
âTttthhhrrruueee.'
We both jumped out from behind the letterbox and started squirting chilli sauce and maple syrup at where we thought the grannies were standing.
âTake that you almost-killer grannies,' I shouted.
âUuuuuu dduuunnnttt luuuukkkkk uutttt uuubbbb oooooo dooooo ooooo!' shouted Hils.
We squirted everything we could out of our bottles.
Then we stopped and looked.
There were no grannies there.
Just a really big non-granny.
A man non-granny. A really, very, super big man. Covered in chilli sauce and maple syrup.
We stared at him. He stared at us.
As we stared at him he used his finger to scoop the maple syrup and chilli sauce off his clothes and eat it. While he did this he was mumbling to himself.
âThey are strong, these young ones. Are they strong enough? No. Yes. Yes.'
He just kept on mumbling to himself and eating the chilli sauce and maple syrup off his clothes.
âThere is much they must know,' he said.
When he spoke he spat out some of the maple syrup and chilli sauce. It landed on Hils and me. Thank goodness we were totally protected.
âMuch they shouldn't know,' he said. âTell them. Don't tell them. I must. They must know what danger they are in.'
âWhat danger are we in?' I said.
This was weird. Weird and scary. Weird, scary and also pretty exciting.
âGreat danger. Great, great danger. Tell them. You must. You must tell the young ones.'
âYyyuzzzz! Uuuupppuuuuzzzz uuzzz uuvvv thhhuu . . .'
âHils. Take the gas mask off,' I said.
Hils took her gas mask off.
âAppraise us of all pertinent operational matters,' said Hils.
In the army that means, âPlease tell us what great danger we're facing.'
âYou have stumbled upon a secret. A secret few know. A dark secret. A cruel secret.'
You might be wondering why Hils and I were standing there listening to a completely strange man telling us completely strange things while he ate chilli sauce and maple syrup off his clothes. I think it was because he wasn't any stranger than anything that had happened to Hils and I in the last few days.
The man was very big. Fat big. His T-shirt was way too tight and his pants were way too loose. He had fingers like uncooked sausages that had been dropped in the dirt. He had a straggly beard and his hair hung off his head like dirty, wet towels. The top of his head was covered in dandruff. So much dandruff that you could probably have skied on it. When he talked to us he'd sometimes stop talking to us and talk to himself. After a while it was hard to know when he was talking to us and when he was talking to himself.
âListen carefully to my tale. I can tell it only once,' he said.
âWe're listening carefully,' I said.
âIn the beginning there was Warren, son of Warwick. Warren was the first paperboy in this neighbourhood. He was the fairest and wisest of all beings. The gods of paper delivery looked down upon Warren and they were pleased with what they saw. Warren rode a magical bike called TwelveSpeed and he delivered all the neighbourhood's papers with skill and grace in any weather. Warren ushered in a golden age of paper rounds. Every boy and girl who wanted a paper round could have one. The mornings resounded with the swishing of newspapers, the skidding of tyres and Michael Gordon crying because his chain was always falling off.'
He stopped for a moment as if the next words he wanted to say were stuck somewhere between his brain and his mouth.
âAs they rode their bikes on those crisp mornings, little did Warren and the other paper deliverers know that a change was coming. A foul change. A change none of them was strong enough to resist. One by one the paperboys began to lose their paper rounds. They lost them to Dave, a teenager with a driver's licence and a van. Dave and his van could deliver the papers quicker and more cheaply than those deliverers on bikes. Soon there were no more paperboys â or girls â on bikes. There was just Dave. One Dave to rule them all.'
He looked around. He seemed scared all of a sudden.
âI must stop. I have told them too much. No. Must tell the young ones. Must tell them. Some things must never be forgotten. What has happened must never be allowed to pass out of knowledge.'
âWhat happened? Did something happen to Dave? We have to know,' I said.
âAffirmative,' said Hils.
âHe should have listened,' said the man.
âWho should have listened to what?' I said.
âDave should have listened to the whispers. The whispers of a nameless fear. The whispers that a power was rising. A power that desired a paper round and would do anything to get it. They will get you too, young ones.'
The man started screaming, âI have nothing left. They can take no more from me. Let them come. LET THEM COME.'
Then he burst into tears. Was he crazy? I just hoped that if he was crazy he'd get to the end of his story before he decided to bite my ear off.
He stopped crying.
âOne gloomy morning,' he said, ânot far from the very ground on which we now stand, Dave was delivering papers when he saw the two grannies.'
âThe ones who attacked me?' I said.
âYes. Dave didn't realise these two grannies wanted to take his paper round from him. They attacked Dave. They attacked him with foul weapons. They cut him. They bashed him. They made him give up his paper round. It is said that some mornings you can still hear Dave crying out, “Lost. Lost. My precious paper round is lost.” '
âPoor Dave,' I said.
âWar is hell,' said Hils.
âSo it came to pass that the grannies attacked others and took over all the paper rounds in this area. But that was not enough for them. Their attacks continued and soon they took over all the local deliveries: council newsletters, advertising flyers for Captain Raj's Curry Spot and Des and Les's Quik Carpet Cleaning Service. They were vicious, ruthless and relentless. Everyone was scared of them.'
âEven Peter the Iraqi newsagent who is not afraid of anything?' I said.
âYes. Even Peter.'
âThat explains why he ran away screaming,' I said.
The strange man continued.
âNo one knows where the grannies come from. No one knows where they live. No one knows how many there are but it is said they have recruited other grannies to do their evil bidding. No one knows what their ultimate goal is. Maybe they wish to take over all the deliveries in the world. It was thought they could never be defeated. Until now. This is a new age. There is a new hope rising. Hope that these evil grannies can be defeated. A great battle is coming. A great battle which will shape the fortunes of all those who want paper rounds now and in the future. I have already said too much. I must go. Be careful, young ones. Listen to the wind. Heed the rumours.'
âDo you know how I can get a paper round?' I said.
âTo get a paper round you must go to war with the grannies. That is all I can tell you.'
He glanced around again. Suddenly he saw something. Something that scared him. Then he just ran off. He ran much faster than I thought someone that big could run.
âHey,' I called after him. âWhat's your name?'
âWarren,' he shouted as he disappeared around the corner.
I don't know whether you've ever wanted a paper round and been told that the only way you can get one is to start a war against some grannies.
âTo get a paper round you'll need to start a war with some grannies.'
âIs that rooster brand chilli sauce in your eyebrows?'
âFive donuts wrapped in ooze thud onto nude zebras.'