Good Omens
Package for you, sir.â
Sable signed for it, his real nameâone word, six letters. Sounds like examine.
âThank you kindly, sir,â said the delivery man. He paused. âHere,â he said. âThat bloke behind the counter. Does he remind you of anyone?â
âNo,â said Sable. He gave the man a tipâfive dollarsâand opened the package.
In it was a small pair of brass scales.
Sable smiled. It was a slim smile, and was gone almost instantly.
âAbout time,â he said. He thrust the scales into his pocket, unheeding of the damage being done to the sleek line of his black suit, and went back to the limo.
âBack to the office?â asked the chauffeur.
âThe airport,â said Sable. âAnd call ahead. I want a ticket to England.â
âYessir. Return ticket to England.â
Sable fingered the scales in his pocket. âMake that a single,â he said. âIâll be making my own way back. Oh, and call the office for me, cancel all appointments.â
âHow long for, sir?â
âThe foreseeable future.â
And in the Burger Lord, behind the counter, the stout man with the cowlick slid another half-dozen burgers onto the grill. He was the happiest man in the whole world and he was singing, very softly.
â. . . yâainât never caught a rabbit,â he hummed to himself, âand yâainât no friend of mine ⦠â
THE THEM LISTENED with interest. There was a light drizzle which was barely kept at bay by the old iron sheets and frayed bits of lino that roofed their den in the quarry, and they always looked to Adam to think up things to do when it was raining. They werenât disappointed. Adamâs eyes were agleam with the joy of knowledge.
It had been 3:00 a.m. before heâd gone to sleep under a pile of New Aquarian s.
âAnâ then there was this man called Charles Fort,â he said. âHe could make it rain fish and frogs and stuff.â
âHuh,â said Pepper. âI bet . Alive frogs?â
âOh, yes,â said Adam, warming to his subject. âHopping around and croaking and everything. People paid him money to go away in the end anâ, anâ ⦠â He racked his brains for something that would satisfy his audience; heâd done, for Adam, a lot of reading in one go. â. . . And he sailed off in the Mary Celeste and founded the Bermuda Triangle. Itâs in Bermuda,â he added helpfully.
âNo, he couldnât of done that,â said Wensleydale sternly, âbecause Iâve read about the Mary Celeste , and there was no one on it. Itâs famous for having no one on it. They found it floating around all by itself with no one on it.â
âI dint say he was on it when they found it, did I?â said Adam scathingly. âCourse he wasnât on it. âCos of the UFOs landinâ and takinâ him off. I thought everyone knew about that.â
The Them relaxed a bit. They were on firmer ground with UFOs. They werenât entirely certain about New Age UFOs, though; theyâd listened politely to Adam on the subject, but somehow modern UFOs lacked punch.
âIf I was an alien,â said Pepper, voicing the opinion of them all, âI wouldnât go round telling people all about mystic cosmic harmony. Iâd say,â her voice became hoarse and nasal, like someone hampered by an evil black mask, â âThish ish a lasher blashter, sho you do what youâre told, rebel swine.ââ
They all nodded. A favorite game in quarry had been based on a highly successful film series with lasers, robots, and a princess who wore her hair like a pair of stereo headphonesâ¢. (It had been agreed without a word being said that if anyone was going to play the part of any stupid princesses, it wasnât going to be Pepper.) But the game normally ended in a fight to be the one who was allowed to wear the coal scuttle⢠and blow up planets. Adam was best at itâwhen he was the villain, he really sounded as if he could blow up the world. The Them were, anyway, temperamentally on the side of planet destroyers, provided they could be allowed to rescue princesses at the same time .
âI sâpect thatâs what they used to do,â said Adam. âBut now itâs different. They all have this bright blue light around âem and go around doing good. Sort of
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