Good Omens
thought Aziraphale. And the road to Hell is paved with good intentions. 46 And he lied cheerfully and convincingly: âOodles. Pots of them. His chest is covered with themâhe makes Diana of the Ephesians look positively nippleless.â
âI wouldna know about this Diana of yours,â said Shadwell, âbut if heâs a witch, and it sounds tae me like he is, then, speaking as a sergeant in the WA, Iâm yer man.â
âGood,â said Aziraphale through Madame Tracy.
âIâm not sure about this killing business,â said Madame Tracy herself. âBut if itâs this man, this Antichrist, or everybody else, then I suppose we donât really have any choice.â
âExactly, dear lady,â she replied. âNow, Sergeant Shadwell. Have you a weapon?â
Shadwell rubbed his right hand with his left, clenching and unclenching the fist. âAye,â he said. âI have that.â And he raised two fingers to his lips and blew on them gently.
There was a pause. â Your hand? â asked Aziraphale.
âAye. âTis a turrible weapon. It did for ye, daemonspawn, did it not?â
âHave you anything more, uh, substantial? How about the Golden Dagger of Meggido? Or the Shiv of Kali?â
Shadwell shook his head. âIâve got some pins,â he suggested. âAnd the Thundergun of Witchfinder-Colonel Ye-Shall-Not-Eat-Any-Living-Thing-With-The-Blood-Neither-Shall-Ye-Use-Enchantment-Nor-Observe-Times Dalrymple ⦠I could load it with silver bullets.â
âThatâs werewolves, I believe ,â said Aziraphale.
âGarlic?â
âVampires.â
Shadwell shrugged. âAye, weel, I dinna have any fancy bullets anyway. But the Thundergun will fire anything. Iâll go and fetch it.â
He shuffled out, thinking, why do I need another weapon? Iâm a man with a hand.
âNow, dear lady,â said Aziraphale. âI trust you have a reliable mode of transportation at your disposal .â
âOh, yes,â said Madame Tracy. She went over to the corner of the kitchen and picked up a pink motorbike helmet, with a yellow sunflower painted on it, and put it on, strapping it under her chin. Then she rummaged in a cupboard, pulled out three or four hundred plastic shopping bags and a heap of yellowing local newspapers, then a dusty day-glo green helmet with EASY RIDER written across the top, a present from her niece Petula twenty years before.
Shadwell, returning with the Thundergun over his shoulder, stared at her unbelieving.
âI donât know what youâre staring at, Mr. Shadwell,â she told him. âItâs parked in the road downstairs.â She passed him the helmet. âYouâve got to put it on. Itâs the law. I donât think youâre really allowed to have three people on a scooter, even if two of them are, er, sharing. But itâs an emergency. And Iâm sure youâll be quite safe, if you hold on to me nice and tight.â And she smiled. âWonât that be fun?â
Shadwell paled, muttered something inaudible, and put on the green helmet.
âWhat was that, Mr. Shadwell?â Madame Tracy looked at him sharply.
âI said, Deâil ding a divot aff yer wame wiâ a flaughter spade,â said Shadwell.
âThatâll be quite enough of that kind of language, Mr. Shadwell,â said Madame Tracy, and she marched him out of the hall and down the stairs to Crouch End High Street, where an elderly scooter waited to take the two, well, call it three of them away.
THE LORRY BLOCKED THE ROAD. And the corrugated iron blocked the road. And a thirty-foot-high pile of fish blocked the road. It was one of the most effectively blocked roads the sergeant had ever seen.
The rain wasnât helping.
âAny idea when the bulldozers are likely to get here?â he shouted into his radio.
âWeâre crrrrk doing the best we crrrrk,â came the reply.
He felt something tugging at his trouser cuff, and looked down.
âLobsters?â He gave a little skip, and a jump, and wound up on the top of the police car. âLobsters,â he repeated. There were about thirty of themâsome over two feet long. Most of them were on their way up the motorway; half a dozen had stopped to check out the police car.
âSomething wrong, Sarge?â asked the police constable, who was taking down the lorry driverâs
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