Good Omens
compulsory National Service, birching, flogging, and dog licenses.
He was very satisfied with it. He had a sneaking suspicion that it would be too good for the Tadfield Advertiser , and had decided to send it to the Times .
Putputput putputput
âExcuse me, love,â said a warm female voice. âI think weâre lost.â
It was an aging motor scooter, and it was being ridden by a middle-aged woman. Clutching her tightly, his eyes screwed shut, was a raincoated little man with a bright green crash helmet on. Sticking up between them was what appeared to be an antique gun with a funnel-shaped muzzle.
âOh. Where are you going?â
âLower Tadfield. Iâm not sure of the exact address, but weâre looking for someone,â said the woman, then, in a totally different voice she said, âHis name is Adam Young .â
R. P. Tyler boggled. âYou want that boy?â he asked. âWhatâs he done now âno, no, donât tell me. I donât want to know.â
âBoy?â said the woman. âYou didnât tell me he was a boy. How old is he?â Then she said, âHeâs eleven . Well, I do wish youâd mentioned this before. It puts a completely different complexion on things.â
R. P. Tyler just stared. Then he realized what was going on. The woman was a ventriloquist. What he had taken for a man in a green crash helmet, he now saw, was a ventriloquistâs dummy. He wondered how he could ever have assumed it was human. He felt the whole thing was in vaguely bad taste.
âI saw Adam Young not five minutes ago,â he told the woman. âHe and his little cronies were on their way to the American air base.â
âOh dear,â said the woman, paling slightly. âIâve never really liked the Yanks. Theyâre really very nice people, you know . Yes, but you canât trust people who pick up the ball all the time when they play football.â
âAhh, excuse me,â said R. P. Tyler, âI think itâs very good. Very impressive. Iâm deputy chairman of the local Rotary club, and I was wondering, do you do private functions?â
âOnly on Thursdays,â said Madame Tracy, disapprovingly. âAnd I charge extra. And I wonder if you could direct us toâ?â
Mr. Tyler had been here before. He wordlessly extended a finger.
And the little scooter went putputputputputput down the narrow country lane.
As it did so, the gray dummy in the green helmet turned around and opened one eye. âYe great southern pillock,â it croaked.
R. P. Tyler was offended, but also disappointed. Heâd hoped it would be more lifelike.
R. P. TYLER, ONLY TEN MINUTES away from the village, paused, while Shutzi attempted another of its wide range of eliminatory functions. He gazed over the fence.
His knowledge of country lore was a little hazy, but he felt fairly sure that if the cows lay down, it meant rain. If they were standing it would probably be fine. These cows were taking it in turns to execute slow and solemn somersaults; and Tyler wondered what it presaged for the weather.
He sniffed. Something was burningâthere was an unpleasant smell of scorched metal and rubber and leather.
âExcuse me,â said a voice from behind him. R. P. Tyler turned around.
There was a large once-black car on fire in the lane and a man in sunglasses was leaning out of one window, saying through the smoke, âIâm sorry, Iâve managed to get a little lost. Can you direct me to Lower Tadfield Air Base? I know itâs around here somewhere.â
Your car is on fire .
No. Tyler just couldnât bring himself to say it. I mean, the man had to know that, didnât he? He was sitting in the middle of it. Possibly it was some kind of practical joke.
So instead he said, âI think you must have taken a wrong turn about a mile back. A signpost has blown down.â
The stranger smiled, âThat must be it, â he said. The orange flames flickering below him gave him an almost infernal appearance.
The wind blew towards Tyler, across the car, and he felt his eyebrows frizzle.
Excuse me, young man, but your car is on fire and youâre sitting in it without burning and incidentally itâs red hot in places .
No.
Should he ask the man if he wanted him to phone the A.A.?
Instead he explained the route carefully, trying not to stare.
âThatâs terrific. Much
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