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Johnny and the Dead

Page 15

by Terry Pratchett


  Huh. School teachers? Why couldn’t they be like they were supposed to be and just chuck things at you if you weren’t paying attention? Instead they all seemed to have been worrying about him and sending notes home and getting him to see a specialist, although the specialist wasn’t too bad and at least it got him out of maths.

  One of the notes had said he was ‘disturbed’. Well, who wasn’t disturbed? He hadn’t shown it to his mum. Things were bad enough as it was.

  ‘You getting on all right at your grandad’s?’ said Yo-less.

  ‘It’s not too bad. Grandad does the housework most of the time anyway. He’s good at fried bread. And Surprise Surprise.’

  ‘What’s that?’

  ‘You know that stall on the market that sells tins that’ve got the labels off?’

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘Well, he buys loads of those. And you’ve got to eat them once they’re opened.’

  ‘Yuk.’

  ‘Oh, pineapple and meatballs isn’t too bad.’

  They walked on through the evening street.

  The thing about all of us, Johnny thought, the sad thing is that we’re not very good. Actually that’s not the worst part. The worst part is we’re not even much good at being not much good.

  Take Yo-less. When you looked at Yo-less you might think he had possibilities. He was black. Technically. But he never said ‘Yo’, and only said ‘check it out’ in the supermarket, and the only person he ever called a mother was his mother. Yo-less said it was racial stereotyping to say all black kids acted like that but, however you looked at it, Yo-less had been born with a defective cool. Trainspotters were cooler than Yo-less. If you gave Yo-less a baseball cap he’d put it on the right way round. That’s how, well, yo-less Yo-less was. Sometimes he actually wore a tie.

  Now, Bigmac … Bigmac was good. He was good at maths. Sort of. It made the teachers wild. You could show Bigmac some sort of horrible equation and he’d say ‘x=2.75’ and he’d be right. But he never knew why. ‘It’s just what it is,’ he’d say. And that was no good. Knowing the answers wasn’t what maths was about. Maths was about showing how you worked them out, even if you got them wrong. Bigmac was also a skinhead. Bigmac and Bazza and Skazz were the last three skinheads in Blackbury. At least, the last three who weren’t someone’s dad. And he had LOVE and HAT on his knuckles, but only in Biro because when he’d gone to get tattooed he fainted. And he bred tropical fish.

  As for Wobbler … Wobbler wasn’t even a nerd. He wanted to be a nerd but they wouldn’t let him join. He had a Nerd Pride badge and he messed around with computers. What Wobbler wanted was to be a kid in milk-bottle-bottom glasses and a deformed anorak, who could write amazing software and be a millionaire by the time he was twenty, but he’d probably settle for just being someone whose computer didn’t keep smelling of burning plastic every time he touched it.

  And as for Johnny …

  … if you go mad, do you know you’ve gone mad? If you don’t, how do you know you’re not mad?

  ‘It wasn’t a bad film,’ Wobbler was saying. They’d been to Screen W at the Blackbury Odeon. They generally went to see any film that promised to have laser beams in it somewhere.

  ‘But you can’t travel in time without messing things up,’ said Yo-less.

  ‘That’s the whole point,’ said Bigmac. ‘That’s what you want to do. I wouldn’t mind joining the police if they were time police. You’d go back and say, “Hey, are you Adolf Hitler?” and when he said, “Achtung, that’s me, ja” … Kablooeee! With the pump-action shotgun. End of problem.’

  ‘Yes, but supposing you accidentally shot your own grandfather,’ said Yo-less patiently.

  ‘I wouldn’t. He doesn’t look a bit like Adolf Hitler.’

  ‘Anyway, you’re not that good a shot,’ said Wobbler. ‘You got kicked out of the Paintball Club, didn’t you?’

  ‘Only ’cos they were jealous that they hadn’t thought of a paintball hand grenade before I showed them how.’

  ‘It was a tin of paint, Bigmac. A two-litre tin.’

  ‘Well, yeah, but in contex’ it was a hand grenade.’

  ‘They said you might at least have loosened the lid a bit. Sean Stevens needed stitches.’

  ‘I didn’t mean actually shooting your actual grandfather,’ said Yo-less, loudly. ‘I mean messing things up so maybe you’re not actually born or your time machine never gets invented. Like in that film where the robot is sent back to kill the mother of the boy who’s going to beat the robots when he grows up.’

  ‘Good one, that,’ said Bigmac, strafing the silent shops with an invisible machine gun.

  ‘But if he never got born how did they know he’d existed?’ said Yo-less. ‘Didn’t make any sense to me.’

  ‘How come you’re such an expert?’ said Wobbler.

  ‘Well, I’ve got three shelves of Star Trek videos,’ said Yo-less.

  ‘Anorak alert!’

  ‘Nerd!’

  ‘Trainspotter!’

  ‘Anyway,’ said Yo-less, ‘if you changed things, maybe you’d end up not going back in time, and there you would be, back in time, I mean, except you never went in the first place, so you wouldn’t be able to come back on account of not having gone. Or, even if you could get back, you’d get back to another time, like a sort of parallel dimension, because if the thing you changed hadn’t happened then you wouldn’t’ve gone, so you could only come back to somewhere you never went. And there you’d be – stuck.’

  They tried to work this out.

  ‘Huh, you’d have to be mad even to understand time travel,’ said Wobbler eventually.

  ‘Job opportunity for you there, Johnny,’ said Bigmac.

  ‘Bigmac,’ said Yo-less, in a warning voice.

  ‘It’s all right,’ said Johnny. ‘The doctor said I just worry about things too much.’

  ‘What kind of loony tests did you have?’ said Bigmac. ‘Big needles and electric shocks and that?’

  ‘No, Bigmac,’ sighed Johnny. ‘They don’t do that. They just ask you questions.’

  ‘What, like “are you a loony?”’

  ‘It’d be sound to go a long way back in time,’ said Wobbler. ‘Back to the dinosaurs. No chance of killing your grandad then, unless he’s really old. Dinosaurs’d be all right.’

  ‘Great!’ said Bigmac. ‘Then I could wipe ’em out with my plasma rifle! Oh, yes!’

  ‘Yeah,’ said Wobbler, rolling his eyes. ‘That’d explain a lot. Why did the dinosaurs die out sixty-five million years ago? Because Bigmac couldn’t get there any earlier.’

  ‘But you haven’t got a plasma rifle,’ said Johnny.

  ‘If Wobbler can have a time machine, then I can have a plasma rifle.’

  ‘Oh, all right.’

  ‘And a rocket launcher.’

  A time machine, thought Johnny. That would be something. You could get your life exactly as you wanted it. If something nasty turned up, you could just go back and make sure that it didn’t. You could go wherever you wanted and nothing bad would ever have to happen.

  Around him, the boys’ conversation, as their conversations did, took on its own peculiar style.

  ‘Anyway, no one’s proved the dinosaurs did die out.’

  ‘Oh, yeah, right, sure, they’re still around, are they?’

  ‘I mean p’raps they only come out at night, or are camouflaged or something …’

  ‘A brick-finished stegosaurus? A bright red Number 9 brontosaurus?’

  ‘Hey, neat idea. They’d go round pretending to be a bus, right, and people could get on – but they wouldn’t get off again. Oooo-Eee-Oooo …’

  ‘Nah. False noses. False noses and beards. Then just when people aren’t expecting it – UNK! Nothing on the pavement but a pair of shoes and a really big bloke in a mac, shuffling away …’

  Paradise Street, thought Johnny. Paradise Street was on his mind a lot, these days. Especially at night.

  I bet if you asked the people there if time travel w
as a good idea they’d say yes. I mean, no one knows what happened to the dinosaurs, but we know what happened to Paradise Street.

  I wish I could go back to Paradise Street.

  Something hissed.

  They looked around. There was an alleyway between the charity clothes shop and the video library. The hissing came from there, except now it had changed into a snarl.

  It wasn’t at all pleasant. It went right into his ears and right through Johnny’s modern brain and right down into the memories built into his very bones. When an early ape had cautiously got down out of its tree and wobbled awkwardly along the ground, trying out this new ‘standing upright’ idea all the younger apes were talking about, this was exactly the kind of snarl it hated to hear.

  It said to every muscle in the body: run away and climb something. And possibly throw down some coconuts, too.

  ‘There’s something in the alley,’ said Wobbler, looking around in case there were any trees handy.

  ‘A werewolf?’ said Bigmac.

  Wobbler stopped. ‘Why should it be a werewolf?’ he said.

  ‘I saw this film, Curse of the Revenge of the Werewolf,’ said Bigmac, ‘and someone heard a snarl like that and went into a dark alley, and next thing, he was lying there with all his special effects spilling out on the pavement.’

  ‘Huh,’ quavered Wobbler. ‘There’s no such things as werewolves.’

  ‘You go and tell it, then.’

  Johnny stepped forward.

  There was a shopping trolley lying on its side just inside the alley, but that wasn’t unusual. Herds of shopping trolleys roamed the streets of Blackbury. While he’d never seen one actually moving, he sometimes suspected that they trundled off as soon as his back was turned.

  Bulging carrier bags and black plastic dustbin liners lay around it, and there was a number of jars. One of them had broken open, and there was a smell of vinegar.

  One of the bundles was wearing trainers.

  You didn’t see that very often.

  A terrible monster pulled itself over the top of the trolley and spat at Johnny.

  It was white, but with bits of brown and black as well. It was scrawny. It had three and a half legs but only one ear. Its face was a mask of absolute, determined evil. Its teeth were jagged and yellow, its breath as nasty as a pepper spray.

  Johnny knew it well. So did practically everyone else in Blackbury.

  ‘Hello, Guilty,’ he said, taking care to keep his hands by his sides.

  If Guilty was here, and the shopping trolley was here …

  He looked down at the bundle with the trainers.

  ‘I think something’s happened to Mrs Tachyon,’ he said.

  The others hurried up.

  It only looked like a bundle, because Mrs Tachyon tended to wear everything she owned, all at once. This was a woolly hat, about twelve jerseys and a pink ra-ra skirt, then bare pipe-cleaner legs down to several pairs of football socks and the huge trainers.

  ‘Is that blood?’ said Wobbler.

  ‘Ur,’ said Bigmac. ‘Yuk.’

  ‘I think she’s alive,’ said Johnny. ‘I’m sure I heard a groan.’

  ‘Er … I know first aid,’ said Yo-less, uncertainly. ‘Kiss of life and stuff.’

  ‘Kiss of life? Mrs Tachyon? Yuk,’ said Bigmac.

  Yo-less looked very worried. What seemed simple when you did it in a nice warm hall with the instructor watching seemed a lot more complicated in an alleyway, especially with all the woolly jumpers involved. Whoever invented first aid hadn’t had Mrs Tachyon in mind.

  Yo-less knelt down gingerly. He patted Mrs Tachyon vaguely, and something fell out of one of her many pockets. It was fish and chips, wrapped in a piece of newspaper.

  ‘She’s always eating chips,’ said Bigmac. ‘My brother says she picks thrown-away papers out of the bin to see if there’s any chips still in ’em. Yuk.’

  ‘Er …’ said Yo-less desperately, as he tried to find, a way of administering first aid without actually touching anything.

  Finally Johnny came to his rescue and said, ‘I know how to dial 999.’

  Yo-less sagged with relief ‘Yes, yes, that’s right,’ he said. ‘I’m pretty sure you mustn’t move people, on account of breaking bones.’

  ‘Or the crust,’ said Wobbler.

  About the Author

  Terry Pratchett is the acclaimed creator of the global bestselling Discworld® series, the first of which, The Colour of Magic, was published in 1983. His books have been widely adapted for stage and screen, and he is the winner of multiple prizes, including the Carnegie Medal, as well as being awarded a knighthood for services to literature. After falling out with his keyboard he now talks to his computer. Occasionally, these days, it answers back.

  BOOKS BY TERRY PRATCHETT

  The Discworld® Series

  1. THE COLOUR OF MAGIC

  2. THE LIGHT FANTASTIC

  3. EQUAL RITES

  4. MORT

  5. SOURCERY

  6. WYRD SISTERS

  7. PYRAMIDS

  8. GUARDS! GUARDS!

  9. ERIC

  (illustrated by Josh Kirby)

  10. MOVING PICTURES

  11. REAPER MAN

  12. WITCHES ABROAD

  13. SMALL GODS

  14. LORDS AND LADIES

  15. MEN AT ARMS

  16. SOUL MUSIC

  17. INTERESTING TIMES

  18. MASKERADE

  19. FEET OF CLAY

  20. HOGFATHER

  21. JINGO

  22. THE LAST CONTINENT

  23. CARPE JUGULUM

  24. THE FIFTH ELEPHANT

  25. THE TRUTH

  26. THIEF OF TIME

  27. THE LAST HERO

  (illustrated by Josh Kirby)

  28. THE AMAZING MAURICE &

  HIS EDUCATED RODENTS (for young adults)

  29. NIGHT WATCH

  30. THE WEE FREE MEN (for young adults)

  31. MONSTROUS REGIMENT

  32. A HAT FULL OF SKY (for young adults)

  33. GOING POSTAL

  34. THUD!

  35. WINTERSMITH (for young adults)

  36. MAKING MONEY

  37. UNSEEN ACADEMICALS

  38. I SHALL WEAR MIDNIGHT (for young adults)

  39. SNUFF

  40. RAISING STEAM

  Other books about Discworld

  THE SCIENCE OF DISCWORLD

  THE SCIENCE OF DISCWORLD II: THE GLOBE

  THE SCIENCE OF DISCWORLD III: DARWIN’S WATCH

  TURTLE RECALL: THE DISCWORLD COMPANION . . . SO FAR

  (with Stephen Briggs)

  NANNY OGG’S COOKBOOK

  (with Stephen Briggs, Tina Hannan and Paul Kidby)

  THE PRATCHETT PORTFOLIO

  (with Paul Kidby)

  THE DISCWORLD ALMANAK

  (with Bernard Pearson)

  THE UNSEEN UNIVERSITY CUT-OUT BOOK

  (with Alan Batley and Bernard Pearson)

  WHERE’S MY COW?

  (illustrated by Melvyn Grant)

  THE ART OF DISCWORLD

  (with Paul Kidby)

  THE WIT AND WISDOM OF DISCWORLD

  (compiled by Stephen Briggs)

  THE FOLKLORE OF DISCWORLD

  (with Jacqueline Simpson)

  THE WORLD OF POO

  (with the Discworld Emporium)

  THE COMPLEAT ANKH-MORPORK

  (with the Discworld Emporium)

  THE STREETS OF ANKH-MORPORK

  (with Stephen Briggs, painted by Stephen Player)

  THE DISCWORLD MAPP

  (with Stephen Briggs, painted by Stephen Player)

  A TOURIST GUIDE TO LANCRE – A DISCWORLD MAPP

  (with Stephen Briggs, illustrated by Paul Kidby)

  DEATH’S DOMAIN (with Paul Kidby)

  A complete list of Terry Pratchett ebooks and audio books as well as other books based on the Discworld series – illustrated screenplays, graphic novels, comics and plays – can be found on www.te
rrypratchett.co.uk

  Shorter Writing

  A BLINK OF THE SCREEN

  Non-Discworld books

  THE DARK SIDE OF THE SUN

  STRATA

  THE UNADULTERATED CAT (illustrated by Gray Jolliffe)

  GOOD OMENS (with Neil Gaiman)

  THE LONG EARTH (with Stephen Baxter)

  THE LONG WAR (with Stephen Baxter)

  Non-Discworld novels for young adults

  THE CARPET PEOPLE

  TRUCKERS

  DIGGERS

  WINGS

  ONLY YOU CAN SAVE MANKIND

  JOHNNY AND THE DEAD

  JOHNNY AND THE BOMB

  NATION

  DODGER

  DODGER’S GUIDE TO LONDON

  JOHNNY AND THE DEAD

  AN RHCP DIGITAL EBOOK 9781407042787

  Published in Great Britain by RHCP Digital,

  an imprint of Random House Children’s Publishers UK

  A Random House Group Company

  This ebook edition published 2014

  Text copyright © Terry and Lyn Pratchett, 1993

  Cover illustrations copyright © Paul Kidby, 2013

  Extract from JOHNNY AND THE BOMB copyright © Terry and Lyn Pratchett, 1996

  Chapter head decorations copyright © www.hen.uk.com, 2004

  First Published in Great Britain by Doubleday, 1993

  The right of Terry Pratchett to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  RANDOM HOUSE CHILDREN’S PUBLISHERS UK

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