by Annie Dalton
I saw a tiny muscle move in Brice’s cheek. “Poor guy got too close to the PODS.”
Lola’s eyes went dark with distress. “You think the PODS did that?”
Brice tried to laugh. “Oh, yeah. They use you up. Then when there’s nothing left, they shed you like yesterday’s trash.”
The old guy’s hair and beard was so long and dirty that tiny life-forms had set up home there. He must have been wandering around out here for weeks. Once my human teacher, Miss Rowntree, read us a v. depressing poem, The Ancient Mariner it was called, about a sailor who stupidly shot an albatross and was doomed to wander the seven seas forever. I thought maybe he’d looked like this.
Lola had put her hand on Brice’s sleeve. “But that didn’t happen to you,” she said softly. “You got away. Plus you’ve got friends who really care about you.”
They’d obviously forgotten I was there, so I coughed. “At least we know we’ve come to the right time.” I pointed at the old man’s shredded sun-faded garments. “Those fastenings are typically Victorian.” I knew my fashion, if nothing else.
“Well, if someone doesn’t get him out of the sun, this Victorian’s a goner,” said Brice.
Lola sucked in her breath. “Oh, look, his poor leg!”
The old man’s tattered trousers had split at a side seam, exposing a hideous scar around his bony calf.
Brice whistled. “He must have come over to Australia on a transport ship. They used to keep the convicts in leg irons until they arrived at Botany Bay,” he explained.
I stared at him. “Are you saying he’s a criminal?”
“Not necessarily. In his day, just stealing a loaf of bread is enough to get you transported.”
“Whatever he did it’s in the past,” said Lola. “What matters is he asked us to help.”
She’s right, I thought. We’d arrived in time to hear his SOS, which made us kind of responsible.
“How can we help him, though? We can’t exactly move him,” I objected.
“We can keep beaming vibes,” she suggested. “If we boost his energy levels, it’ll be that much easier for the Agency to send him the help he needs.”
We sat down in the desert and beamed vibes until I felt dizzy.
The old man started mumbling to himself. “I put it in my pocket,” he blurted suddenly. “I put it in my pocket!”
After half an hour or so, I saw Lola shading her eyes. “Is that a tornado?” she asked anxiously.
A huge swirling cloud of dust was travelling rapidly towards us. But it wasn’t some kind of Australian whirlwind as Lola thought. It was a wagon pulled by sweating horses.
“Whoa!” The driver jumped down from his seat and knelt beside the old man. “Wonder how long you’ve been here, you poor old devil?”
He unstoppered his water bottle and tried to drip some water down the old man’s throat, but it ran away uselessly into the sand.
“I can’t just leave you here,” he muttered. The driver was a really sweet guy, also tres strong and muscular. He lifted the old man as easily as if he was a baby and laid him in the back of the wagon.
“We’d better go with him, to make sure he’s OK,” Lola said.
Distances in Australia are really something else.
We went bumping down that track for FIVE hours. Was this really the nearest place the driver could think of? The old man was still raving deliriously about his mysterious pocket.
Poor old guy, he’s lost it, I thought. I won’t pretend I was thrilled at this unexpected diversion, but when you’re an angel you have to take the yin with the yang and whatever, and I did feel genuinely sorry for him.
“Yikes, tingles!” squeaked Lola suddenly. “I’m getting major tingles all over.”
“Me too,” I said startled. “What’s doing it?”
“I should imagine it’s that rock,” said Brice, and he pointed into the near distance.
I thought the glowing red rock formation looked practically extraterrestrial. It was huge, like some massive crouching animal.
“It’s out of this world,” breathed Lola.
“It is in a way. It’s sacred to the Aborigines, so it exists in multi-dimensional reality as well as the 3D kind,” Brice told her.
We all gazed at the awesome rock. It was a really special moment. Of course, then Brice had to spoil it. “The Aborigines are the original Australians, Melanie,” he added with a sarcastic grin. “Those people who don’t live here, remember?”
I spent the rest of the journey in huffy silence.
At last we spotted a big plantation of eucalyptus trees. Behind the trees was a wooden church, and beside the church was the mission house, a white-painted building with a large shady verandah.
The driver reined in his team and bellowed a greeting. Two serving women immediately ran out of the house looking stunned to see another human being.
“Got an old timer in my wagon, half-dead with sunstroke,” he told them.
The older woman climbed up and laid her hand on the old man’s forehead. “Sunstroke is right. You could fry eggs on him,” she muttered.
She frowned as she registered the livid scars on the old man’s leg. “You can’t bring him in the house,” she told the driver. “Convicts make the missus nervous.” She gave a rasping laugh. “They made an exception for me. Good cooks are hard to find, eh!”
Luckily the driver was a real charmer and he managed to persuade the women to make up a bed on the verandah. He carried the old man into the shade. “I put it in my pocket,” the old man moaned. “I put it in my pocket.”
“Never mind, grand-dad,” said the woman. “You’ll be out of it soon.”
“He’s had it hard,” said the younger woman timidly. “You can see it in his face.”
The other servant snorted. “Him? He didn’t have to slave in the prison laundry for five years. And he didn’t live with a drunken bully and lose two precious little babies to the diphtheria, so don’t tell me I should feel sorry for him.”
But she wasn’t as cynical as she pretended, because with her next breath she told the driver to come round to the kitchen for a feed of boiled mutton and some strong tea. They went into the mission house, leaving the old man alone.
“I can’t believe those missionaries won’t let a dying man in their house,” I said. “I thought Christians were supposed to like, forgive people.”
“I’m not convinced he is dying, actually,” said Lola. “I’m not getting that death vibe, are you? I don’t think he’s ready.”
I knew what she meant. You could feel the old man’s spirit hanging on grimly by its fingernails.
It’s almost like something won’t let him die, I thought. Like that guy in the albatross poem.
A shiver went through me. “Can the PODS do that?” I asked in a panic. “Can they make someone stay alive even if they don’t want to?”
Brice shook his head. “Definitely not. He has to be doing it himself.”
Hours passed and still the old man hung on. The fierce heat began to lose its sting and at last the sun went down like a great ball of red fire.
We were watching over our human so anxiously that we didn’t notice the old Aboriginal woman come out of the bush. She was just suddenly there, padding silently up the wooden steps and on to the verandah. She went straight to the old man, squatted down beside him and started giving him a real telling-off!
As you know, angels understand every human language going, and her scolding went something like this.
“I know why you can’t die, you wicked old white fella. You still got work to do. You got a terrible wrong to put right.”
It was amazing. The old man instantly calmed down. It was like he actually understood what she was saying. Brice and Lola looked as astonished as I felt.
“That’s better,” said the old woman fiercely. “You been a real loud-mouth your whole life. Now listen to someone else for a change. That’s good! Now you get to hear the Earth singing to you. You didn’t know everything
got its own song, even a no-good white fella like you? Well it has.” The woman’s eyes flickered slyly in our direction. “And these Shining People, they came out of the Dreaming to help me sing it to you.”
Omigosh, she must mean us! I thought.
The old woman had begun to chant aloud in her own language.
“Show some respect, will you,” Brice snapped at us. “She said we’d come to help. So help already!”
That’s the extraordinary thing about the angel biz. You never know what’s going to happen next. You confidently set off to Victorian London, and before you know it, you’re in Australia taking part in a tribal chantathon on a Christian verandah.
And after a while this incredibly mystical thing happened. The night literally came alive around me. The coolest thing was that I was a part of it! Angels, sacred rocks and eucalyptus trees, mad men and wise old women, we were all a part of the same living, breathing, star-spangled web, and for just a moment we shared a heart and mind.
One by one, we stopped chanting and my head filled up with this vast silence. We just sat there without speaking, or even thinking, and it was so peaceful I can’t tell you.
The chanting must have been quite powerful too, because when the sun rose next morning the old man was sleeping like a little baby, and the old woman was nowhere to be seen.
Lola did one of her catlike stretches. “Our human’s out of the woods. Now it’s up to him to sort his life out. That means it’s time to hit the road, guys.”
Brice gave me a mocking grin. “Are my little Shining People ready to beam yourselves to London?”
Beam ourselves! I thought. Do we really have to?
Brice has this unnerving ability to sense my weaknesses. “Angel tags? Remember those?” he reminded me sarcastically. “You use them to connect with your cosmic power source, blah blah blah.”
“I know how angel tags work, thank you,” I said stiffly. “But what if we end up in the wrong place?”
“We won’t,” said Lola. “We’ve done it before.”
Yeah from like, a street away, I thought.
Brice’s smirk made it insultingly clear that he thought I was chicken.
“OK, fine!” I snapped. “Let’s beam ourselves to completely the other side of the world. I mean, what’s so hard about that?” And I grasped my tags and concentrated on connecting with my cosmic power source, like Brice said.
There are places on Earth where it’s almost impossible to get a decent angelic signal, and then there are others where the atmosphere is so pure that the connection is instantaneous. The Australian outback is the second kind.
The power surge totally lit up our surroundings. Next minute the arid desert landscape started to stream away from us like flowing lava.
Oh-oh, this is way too mystical for me! I panicked. Suppose we get separated and I get left behind in the Dreaming all by myself? I’ll be floating around here forever and ever. I was so scared that I just grabbed for Lola’s hand and shut my eyes.
To my huge relief, the terrifying cosmic rushing sensation stopped almost as soon as it had begun.
After a few seconds I dared to peek and was confused to see Brice rubbing the feeling back into his fingers. “You should take up arm-wrestling, angel girl,” he told me. “You’ve got quite a grip.”
It wasn’t Lola I’d clutched in my terror. It was Brice.
Chapter Three
It seems very different. From Elizabethan times, I mean.”
Lola’s obvious disappointment penetrated my blur of shame. She hates it, I thought miserably. She thinks I’ve screwed up big time. And now I came to take in my surroundings, so did I.
We were on a street corner in the East End of London, just before dawn. An old-fashioned gas lamp made a wobbly halo in the fog. Figures toiled past like grey ghosts. They all seemed to be struggling with things that were too heavy for them, lugging baskets or bundles, or patiently dragging home-made carts and trolleys. Soot-blackened tenements loomed over the street, shutting out the sky.
It isn’t like this in Sherlock Holmes, I thought.
“Hey, we just went from summer to winter in twenty seconds. That’s enough to make anyone feel strange,” I said brightly. “The sun will come up in a minute. Then we’ll see how cool this is.”
Brice pulled his hood over his head. “I wouldn’t hold my breath.”
A young girl trudged by. ‘“Oo will buy?” she called in a harsh voice. ‘“Oo will buy my sweet pippins?”
I saw Brice examining his watch with a baffled expression. It just showed a bizarre row of zeros. So did mine and Lola’s.
“Maybe the Dreaming confused them,” Lola suggested.
Trainees don’t strictly need the Agency’s hi-tech watches to monitor the local thought and light levels, or to signal the approach of humans assigned to them. Angels functioned perfectly well for aeons without modern technology and so could we. But this unexpected technical hitch made me feel scarily far from home.
Without a word, we set off down the street. Brice was visibly cheesed off, and Lola kept darting him worried looks, like, “Oh, no, poor Brice is in a bad mood.”
I scowled to myself. Why did he have to be here? OK, maybe Victorian London wasn’t as buzzy as I’d hoped. But if Lola and I were by ourselves, we’d still be having a laugh. She’s not giving it a chance, I thought in despair. She’s under this sinister Brice spell and she’s seeing everything through his eyes.
It wasn’t light yet, but all around us Londoners were grimly starting the new day. Shutters went up with a clatter, and sleepy shop assistants stumbled out and started sweeping the pavements, getting ready for business. Since we’d arrived, traffic had been trickling steadily into the city and horse-drawn cabs, carts and omnibuses began to compete for space in the narrow streets.
I noticed Lola peering into a dingy shop-front. Over the door was a painted sign showing three golden balls. The shop window was crammed with old tat: tarnished jewellery, broken clocks, a pair of faded leather gloves worn into holes. Who’d be desperate enough to buy that? I thought.
“What does this shop sell?” Lola asked in a puzzled voice.
“It’s not a shop, it’s a pawnbroker’s, ” Brice explained. “People only come here when they’re stony broke. They leave an item as security, a few teaspoons, a necklace or whatever, and the pawnbroker lends them some cash until they can afford to buy it back. Only mostly they can’t, which means the pawnbroker usually gets to collect.”
I quickly moved away. It was the gloves. The thought of anyone wanting to buy them. The thought of anyone being that poor.
I’d been picturing Victorian London as scenery basically; a lively backdrop for a spot of angelic tourism - the sound of trotting hooves on cobbled streets, hot buttered muffins by the fire. I hadn’t thought what it would feel like for humans living there.
A terrifying figure emerged from an alleyway with a bundle of filthy brushes on his back. He was dragging a little boy by the arm. Both man and child were totally black with soot, except for their red-rimmed eyes. The little boy was crying in the hopeless way kids do when they know no-one cares.
“Stop your bleedin’ row, will ya!” the man yelled. “Or I’ll stop it for ya!”
Lola looked shocked. “What’s he doing with that little kid?”
“Providing him with a career opportunity,” said Brice. “Giving him a chance to be an honest tax-paying citizen.”
“That child is tiny! What can he possibly do?”
“He’ll fit very snugly inside a chimney,” said Brice. “Especially if that nice gentleman gives him a good kicking to help him on his way. Everyone has coal fires these days. Haven’t you noticed the smell not to mention the soot everywhere? And if you don’t sweep yer chimbleys regularly, darlin’,” he said, putting on a cockney accent, “they catches on fire, don’t they?”
Lola stared at me. “Please tell me he’s joking.”
Unfortunately I had to tell her the truth. “He’s not. They real
ly do put little boys up chimneys. It’s in Oliver Twist.”
“And this is like, legal?” My mate’s eyes were dark with distress.
“You bet,” said Brice. “Since the Industrial Revolution, kids have been a vital part of the economy. They work as fluff pickers and mud larks and—”
He’s doing this on purpose, I thought scowling. He’s brainwashing Lola, making her think coming here was a mistake.
This wasn’t supposed to happen. Brice was supposed to look bad, not me.
By this time crowds of office clerks were hurrying through the streets. They were on their way to work, but in their gloomy suits and high stiff collars, they looked more as if they were going to a funeral.
Brice was still reeling off depressing Victorian info.
“Most of these sad characters work in the counting houses in the city,” he said. “What a way to spend your life, copying figures into ledgers all day.”
I didn’t need an ex-PODS agent to tell me how hard these people’s lives were. I could see it in their bleak expressions and their unhealthy, greenish complexions, as if they rarely saw daylight.
It’s like they’re trapped in some nightmare machine and don’t know how to get off, I thought. I was feeling fairly trapped myself.
Lola gave me a searching look. “Did you do that protection thingy?” she murmured. “Because you look a bit -”
Oh, no wonder! I thought. What with my little hand-holding humiliation earlier, and the watches malfunctioning, I’d forgotten to run though my usual landing procedure. Basically since I got here, I’d been soaking up negative vibes like a sponge.
I mentally instructed my angelic system to protect itself from any cosmic toxins in the locality. Ahh, that’s better I thought.
“Shouldn’t we be running into our human at some point?” I said aloud.
“You’d think,” said Lola.
A horse-drawn cab pulled up to the curb. A middle-aged lady got out carrying two carpet bags.
The street was super busy by this time, so she started off towards the crossing. I don’t know if it was her crinoline or the corset underneath that made her take such little steps, but it made her look like she was on tiny wheels! When she reached the crossing, I saw the lady crinkle her nose. There were piles of horse manure everywhere.