Read Johnny and the Bomb Online
Authors: Terry Pratchett
Not just off the road, in fact, but over the pavement and across a flowerbed and into the Alderman Bowler Memorial Horsetrough.
The plumes of steam were quite pretty, really. There were little rainbows in them.
âWell, now,' said a voice, as someone opened a car door, âwhat do we have here?'
âI think I banged my head,' said Bigmac.
A large hand encircled his arm and pulled him out of the car. Bigmac looked up into two round faces that had âpoliceman' written all over them. There was room for quite a lot of things to be written all over them. They were very large faces.
âThat is Dr Roberts' car,' they said, âand you, my lad, are in for it. What's your name?'
âSimon Wrigley,' mumbled Bigmac. âMs Partridge knows all about me â¦
âShe does, does she? And who's she?'
Bigmac blinked at the two faces which miraculously flowed together and became one.
He'd quite liked Ms Partridge. She was nasty. The two social workers he'd had before had made out that he was wet, whereas Ms Partridge made it
clear that if she had her way Bigmac would have been strangled at birth. You could
respect
someone like that. They didn't make you feel like some kind of a useless nerd.
Something prodded at his memory.
âWhen is this?' he said, rubbing his head.
âYou can start by telling me where you liveâ'
The policeman leaned closer. There was something about Bigmac that bothered him.
âWhat do you mean, when is this?' he said.
âWhat year?'
The policeman had fairly fixed ideas about what should happen to car thieves, but they usually knew what year it was.
âIt's 1941,' he said, and straightened up. His eyes narrowed. âWho's the captain of the England cricket team?' he said.
Bigmac blinked.
âWhat? How should I know?'
âWho won the Boat Race last year?'
âWhat boat race?'
The policeman looked again.
âAnd what's that on your belt?'
Bigmac blinked again, and looked down.
âI didn't nick it,' he said quickly. âIt's only a transistor, anyway.'
âWhat's that wire going into your ear?'
âDon't be daft. It's only the earphoneâ'
The policeman's hand landed on his shoulder with the kind of thud that suggested it wasn't going to let go in a hurry.
âYou come along with me, Fritz,' he said. âI wasn't born yesterday.'
Bigmac's brain drifted into focus. He looked at the uniform, and at the crowd behind it, and it began to dawn on him that he was all alone and a long, long way from home.
âI wasn't born yesterday, either,' he said. âDoes that help?'
Johnny, Kirsty and Yo-less sat in a little garden. As far as Johnny could tell, it was where part of the ring road and a traffic island were going to be one day. Now it contained a bench and some geraniums.
âThey'll blow up Paradise Street tonight,' said Johnny.
âWhere's that?' said Yo-less.
âHere. It's where the sports centre was ⦠will be, I mean.'
âNever heard of it.'
âYes. I did
say
. It got blown up. And you know the funny thing about it?'
âThere's something funny about it?' said Kirsty.
âIt was by accident! The Germans had meant to bomb the big goods yard at Slate! But they got a bit
lost and the weather turned bad and they saw the railway yards here and dropped all their bombs and went home. Everyone was in bed because the air raid sirens didn't go off in time!'
âAll right, all right, I know, you've told me before, and all about Adolf and Stalin. It's very sad but you shouldn't get worked up about it,' said Kirsty. âIt's history. That sort of thing happens in history.'
âAren't you listening? It hasn't happened
yet
. This is
now
. It's going to happen
tonight
.'
They stared at the geraniums.
âWhy haven't we gone back yet?' said Kirsty. âWe've been here
ages
.'
âHow should I know?' said Johnny. âMaybe the further you go, the longer you stay.'
â
And
we just happened to go to somewhere you know all about,' said Yo-less. âThat's a bit strange, in my opinion.'
It had worried Johnny, too. Everything
felt
real, but maybe he'd just gone mad and taken everyone else with him.
âI don't want to stay here, that's definite,' said Yo-less. âBeing Little Black Sambo isn't my idea of a full life.'
Johnny stood up and grasped the handles of the trolley.
âI'm going to see Paradise Street,' he said.
âThat's a very bad idea,' said Kirsty. âI told you, anything you do affects the future.'
âI'm only going to have a look.'
âOh yes? I find that very hard to believe, actually.'
âShe's right,' said Yo-less, trying to keep up. âYou shouldn't mess around with Time. I read this book where a man went right back in time and trod on ⦠on a dinosaur, and changed the whole future.'
âA dinosaur?' said Kirsty.
âI think it was a dinosaur. Maybe they had small ones.'
âHuh. Or he was a very big man, perhaps,' said Kirsty.
The trolley bumped off the pavement, rattled across a road, and clanked up the pavement on the other side.
âWhat're you going to do?' said Kirsty. âKnock on people's doors and say, “Excuse me, some bombers are going to bomb this street tonight”?'
âWhy not?'
âBecause they'll lock you up, that's why,' said Yo-less.
âRight,' said Kirsty. âIt'll be just like the man who trod on Yo-less's dinosaur.'
âIt may have been some sort of insect, now I come to think of it,' said Yo-less. âAnyway, there's
nothing you can do. It's already happened, otherwise how come you know about it? You can't mess up history.'
The trolley stopped so quickly that they ran into the back of Johnny.
âWhy does everyone always talk like that?' he said. âIt's
stupid
. You would really watch someone run over by a car because that's what was supposed to happen, would you? Everything we do changes the future, all the time. So we ought to do what's
right
.'
âDon't shout, people are looking at us,' said Kirsty.
The trolley bumped over the kerb and started to bounce on some cobbles. They were already out of the town centre.
And there was Paradise Street.
It wasn't very long. There were only ten terraced houses on either side, and some of them were boarded up. The far end was a pair of double wooden gates to a factory. They'd once been painted green, but time and the weather had turned the colour into a sort of mossy grey.
Someone had chalked a set of goalposts on the doors, and half a dozen small boys in knee-length shorts were kicking a ball about.
Johnny watched them as they scuffled and perpetrated fouls that would have gladdened the heart of any football manager.
About halfway along the street a young man was repairing a motorcycle. Tools lay on a piece of sacking on the pavement. The football emerged from a complicated tackle, hit the spanners, and almost knocked the bike over.
âTurn it up, you little devils,' said the man, pushing the ball away.
âYou never said anything about children,' said Kirsty, so quietly that Johnny nearly didn't hear her.
Johnny shrugged.
âIt's
all
going to get blown up?' said Yo-less.
Johnny nodded.
âThere wasn't very much detail in the local paper,' he said. âThey didn't used to put very much in, in case the enemy read it. It was all to do with something they called the war effort. You know ⦠not wanting to let the enemy know you'd been hurt. There was a photo of a lady with her thumb up saying “Blackbury can take it, Mister Hitler!” but there was hardly anything else about the raid until a couple of years afterwards.'
âYou mean the government hushed it up?' said Kirsty.
âMakes sense, I suppose,' said Yo-less gloomily. âI mean, you don't want to say to the enemy, “Hey, you missed your target, have another go”.'
The football slammed against the factory gates,
rattling them. There didn't seem to be any teams. The ball just went everywhere, surrounded by a mob of small boys.
âI don't see what we could
do
,' said Kirsty. Her voice sounded uneasy, now.
âWhat? Just now you were telling me I
shouldn't
do anything,' said Johnny.
âIt's different when you see people, isn't it?'
âYes.'
âI suppose it
wouldn't
work if we just told someone?'
âThey'd say “how do you know?” and then you'd probably get shot as a spy,' said Yo-less. âThey used to shoot spies.'
The man in the khaki uniform turned Bigmac's transistor radio over and over in his hands.
Bigmac watched nervously. There was a police sergeant in the room, and Bigmac was familiar with policemen. But there was a soldier standing by the door, and he had a gun in a holster. And the one sitting down looked tired but had a very sharp expression. Bigmac was not the fastest of thinkers, but it had dawned on him that this was unlikely to be the kind of situation where you got let off with a caution.
âLet's start again,' said the seated soldier, who had introduced himself as Captain Harris. âYour name is â¦?'
Bigmac hesitated. He wanted to say, âYou get Ms Partridge, she'll sort it all out, it's not my fault, she
says I'm socially dysfunctional', but there was an expression on the captain's face that suggested that this might be a very unfortunate move.
âSimon Wrigley.'
âAnd you say you are fourteen years old and live inâ' Captain Harris glanced at his notes, âthe Joshua Che N'Clement “block” which is near here, you say.'
âYou can see it easily,' said Bigmac, trying to be helpful. âOr you could do, if it was here.'
The captain and the police sergeant glanced at one another.
âIt's not here?' said the captain.
âYes. I don't know why,' said Bigmac.
âTell me again what Heavy Mental is,' said the captain.
âThey're a neo-punk thrash band,' said Bigmac.
âA music band?'
âEr, yes.'
âAnd we would have heard them on the wireless, perhaps?'
âI shouldn't think so,' said Bigmac. âTheir last single was “I'm going to rip off your head and spit down the hole”.'
â“Rip off your headâ”' said the policeman, who was taking notes.
â“âand spit down the hole”,' said Bigmac helpfully.
âThis watch of yours with the numbers on it,' said the captain. âI see it's got little buttons, too. What happens if I press them?'
The policeman tried to move away a little.
âThe one on the left lights it up so you can see it in the dark,' said Bigmac.
âReally? And why would you want to do that?'
âWhen you wake up in the night and want to know what time it is?' Bigmac suggested, after some deep thought.
âI see. And the other button?'
âOh, that's to tell you what time it is in another country.'
Everyone suddenly seemed very interested.
âWhat other country?' said the captain sharply.
âIt's stuck on Singapore,' said Bigmac.
The captain laid it down very carefully. The sergeant wrote out a label and tied it to the watch strap. Then the captain picked up Bigmac's jacket.
âWhat is this made of?' he said.
âI dunno. Some kind of plastic,' said Bigmac. âThey sell them down the market.'
The captain pulled it this way and that.
âHow is it made?'
âAh, I know that,' said Bigmac. âI read about it. You mix some chemicals together, and you get plastic. Easy.'
âIn camouflage colours,' said the captain.
Bigmac licked his lips. He was sure that he was in deep trouble, so there was no sense in pretending.
âThat's just to make you look hard,' he said.
âHard. I see,' said the captain, and his eyes didn't give away whether he really saw or not. He held up the back of the jacket and pointed to two words done rather badly in biro.
âWhat exactly are BLACKBURY SKINS?' he said.
âEr. That's me and Bazza and Skazz. Er. Skinheads. A ⦠kind of gang â¦'
âGang,' said the captain.
âEr. Yes.'
âSkinheads?'
âEr ⦠the haircut,' said Bigmac.
âLooks like an ordinary military haircut to me,' said the sergeant.
âAnd these,' said the captain, pointing to the swastikas on either side of the name. âGang badges, are they? Also to make you look ⦠hard?'
âEr ⦠it's just ⦠you know ⦠Adolf Hitler and that,' said Bigmac.