Read The Brentford Chainstore Massacre Page 21


  ‘So,’ said John. ‘After I have let off the smoke bomb, you abseil down from the roof, in through the window into the computer room. We’ve synchronized watches and you have forty-five seconds. I back the van with the mattress on the roof up against the building, you come down on the paraglider and we’re away into the night.’

  ‘And no flaw in this plan is immediately apparent to you?’

  It was the next day. They were sitting on the concrete bench. The weather was nice, but nippy. The bench was still uncomfortable (although less so for Jim, who had brought a cushion).

  ‘OK, you have fifty seconds,’ said John.

  ‘John, if I had an hour, or a day, or a week, I could never, ever, do this. You know how I am with electronic equipment. I would blow the place up. Anyway it’s a duff plan. Why don’t I let off the smoke bomb?’

  ‘Because I thought of it.’

  ‘No.’ Jim shook his head. ‘This is another of your fast solutions, the ones that end up like Norman’s sweeties. All guggy.’

  ‘A minute and a half,’ said John. ‘Two minutes.’

  ‘No, John. I’m not doing it. It’s a ludicrous idea.’

  ‘But it’s worth millions. Millions of pounds for three minutes’ work.’

  ‘John, I don’t know anything about computers. I never have and hopefully I never will. Nobody around here knows anything about computers.’

  ‘Someone must.’

  ‘Who then?’

  John scratched at the stubble on his unshaven chin. ‘Norman might.’

  ‘Yes well, Norman might. Didn’t he build his own once? Out of Meccano?’

  ‘I think it was Lego. But he might. We could ask him.’

  ‘Computers?’ said Norman. ‘A piece of cake, computers. I built one out of Duplo once.’

  ‘So you do know about computers?’ John peered at the guggy contents of a sweetie jar. ‘You would know about this?’ He held up the glittering computer disc.

  ‘Certainly. Isn’t that one of those miniature LPs that you can spread strawberry jam on?’

  ‘Who else do we know?’ Jim asked.

  ‘Not too many people,’ said John from his side of the concrete bench (and seated now upon Jim’s cushion). ‘None, in fact.’

  ‘Oh well, throw the thing away.’

  ‘Not a bit of it. This is the big one, Jim. And I’m not going to let you back out again.’

  ‘There’s nobody we know, that’s it.’

  ‘Nobody you know about what?’

  ‘Who said that?’ asked Jim.

  ‘I did.’

  Jim turned round on the bench. Behind him stood a child of perhaps ten years of age. He was a golden child. All golden, golden hair. Golden eyes.

  ‘My name is Cain,’ said the golden child.

  ‘Jim,’ said Jim. ‘And this is––’

  ‘John,’ said the golden child. ‘John Omally.’

  ‘How do you know that?’ asked John.

  ‘I don’t know. But I do.’

  ‘Do you know about computers?’

  ‘No, stop,’ said Jim. ‘He’s a child.’

  ‘Children are great at this stuff, Jim. Hackers and suchlike.’

  ‘Hackers?’

  ‘You really wouldn’t want to know.’

  ‘I know about computers,’ said Cain. ‘I have read all about them.’

  ‘Would you know what to do with this?’ John displayed the little disc.

  ‘Of course.’

  ‘How would you like to earn yourself some extra pocket money?’

  ‘No!’ Jim snatched away the disc. ‘He’s a child, John. Get a grip of yourself.’

  ‘Where’s your brother?’ John asked.

  ‘Abel is in the library. He’s reading all about drag.’

  ‘Drag?’

  ‘Cross-dressing. We’re up to the Ds now. We’re reading the entire contents of the library.’

  ‘Don’t you go to school?’

  ‘What is school? We haven’t reached the Ss yet.’

  ‘You must have done D for Dictionary,’ said Jim.

  ‘What do you want to do with the computer disc?’ asked Cain.

  ‘Put it into someone’s computer,’ said John. ‘And turn it on, that’s all.’

  ‘No,’ said Jim. ‘Not a child.’

  ‘You want to put it into Fred’s computer,’ said the child.

  ‘A mind-reader,’ said John. ‘You can read people’s minds.’

  ‘Some, not all. I cannot read the mind of my father.’

  ‘What number am I thinking of?’ asked Jim.

  ‘Twenty-three,’ said Cain.

  ‘He’s right,’ said Jim.

  ‘Incredible,’ said John.

  ‘Sixty-nine,’ said Cain.

  ‘Pardon me?’

  ‘Sixty-nine’s the number you’re thinking of.’

  ‘What a surprise,’ said Jim. ‘But you couldn’t––’

  ‘Predict the numbers on the National Lottery? No.’

  ‘Shame,’ said Jim. ‘But incredible, none the less. Can your brother do this?’

  ‘Abel can do other things.’

  ‘And Abel knows all about computers too?’

  ‘Abel might not choose to help you. I will.’

  ‘Why?’ asked Jim.

  ‘Because’, said Cain, ‘something wonderful is about to happen. I can feel it in the air. Can’t you?’

  Jim stared into the eyes of Cain. The golden eyes blinked, became a pair of amber eyes. The amber eyes of Suzy. Those marvellous, wonderful, beautiful eyes, that made Jim ache inside. ‘Give me the disc,’ said Cain.

  And Jim gave Cain the disc.

  26

  ‘Who is he?’ Suzy asked, over her bowl of Dilli ka sang ghosht.

  ‘I don’t know.’ Jim pushed naan bread into his mouth. ‘But he can read minds and he said to me exactly what you said to me when we were on the canal bridge.’

  ‘You’re going to see this through now, aren’t you?’

  ‘Well, I have to, don’t I? I’m part of it.’

  ‘You’re a very big part of it. But what changed your mind?’

  ‘Just that. That I am a big part of it. That one of my ancestors murdered the monk. That I found the scrolls. All of it. I can’t walk away. I have to do it. I know that I do. But when it’s done – if it gets done, and I get out of it in one piece – I am going to ask you that question.’

  ‘I’ll be waiting for you when you do. And the answer will probably be yes.’

  ‘Probably?’

  ‘You have to ask it first. Do you want to come back to my flat after we’ve finished our meal?’

  ‘For a cup of coffee?’

  ‘Perhaps for more.’

  ‘Perhaps?’

  ‘Probably for more.’

  ‘How could I refuse? But you remember what I told you.’

  ‘That doesn’t matter.’

  ‘It does to me.’

  ‘You matter, Jim.’

  ‘I do?’

  ‘You know you do.’

  ‘Suzy.’ Jim wiped crumbs from his chin.

  ‘Yes, Jim?’

  Jim took a very deep breath. ‘I’m in love with you,’ he said.

  Suzy smiled. That fascinating mouth, those marvellous, wonderful, beautiful eyes. ‘I love you too,’ she said.

  ‘No,’ said John. ‘Oh, no Jim, no Jim, no Jim, no.’

  They were in the Swan now.

  Lunchtime of the next day.

  ‘I couldn’t help it,’ said Jim. ‘The time seemed right and it just came out. And she said she loved me too. She said, “I love you too,” just like that. I got all knotted up in my throat then, and I knocked a bowl of Punjabi rajma right into her lap.’

  ‘Very romantic.’

  ‘Do you think so? She didn’t seem to think so.’

  ‘And you went back to her flat?’

  We did, yes.’

  ‘And what happened?’

  ‘We had a cup of coffee. Two cups in fact.’

/>   ‘And?’

  ‘Biscuits,’ said Jim.

  ‘And?’

  ‘Just biscuits.’

  ‘Then you didn’t, you know––?’

  ‘No, John, we didn’t.’

  ‘Jim, you have got to pull yourself together. All this soppy stuff is all right in its place. But if you don’t do the business, you’ll lose the woman.’

  ‘Do the business?’

  ‘You know exactly what I’m talking about.’

  ‘There’s more to a relationship than that.’

  “Yes, you’re right, there’s much more. But, in my opinion, doing the business is the best part.’

  Jim sighed. ‘I’m gagging to do the business,’ he said. ‘But the time has to be right. I want everything to be special.’

  ‘Believe me, Jim, whenever you do the business, it’s special.’

  ‘Like it was for you at my PARTY!, do you mean?’

  Omally finished his pint. ‘Same again?’ he asked.

  ‘So,’ said Old Pete, ‘there’s this, er, this––’

  ‘Irishman?’ asked a lady in a straw hat.

  ‘Welshman?’ asked Paul the medical student.

  ‘Dwarf?’ asked Small Dave.

  ‘Er––’ said Old Pete.

  ‘Two pints of Large please, Neville,’ said John Omally.

  ‘Bloke,’ said Old Pete. ‘And he goes into this bar, or was it a––’

  ‘Library?’ asked the lady.

  ‘Church?’ asked Paul.

  ‘Wendy House?’ asked Small Dave.

  ‘Some place,’ said Old Pete. ‘And he’s with this other bloke or was it a––’

  ‘Woman?’ asked the lady.

  ‘Gorilla?’ asked Paul.

  ‘What’s going on?’ asked John Omally.

  Neville did the business. This was the other business. The business that most men do much more often than the other other business.

  ‘He’s run out,’ said Neville.

  ‘Of what?’ asked John.

  ‘Jokes,’ said Neville. ‘He’s dried. Look at him.’

  ‘Has this operation,’ said Old Pete, ‘or did he go into a monastery?’

  ‘Perhaps it was a bank,’ said the lady.

  ‘An Irishman went into a bank once,’ said Paul. ‘He said, “Stick ‘em up” and the bloke behind the counter said, “You’re Irish, aren’t you?” and the bank robber said, “How do you know that?” and the bloke behind the counter said, “You’ve sawn the wrong end off your shotgun.” ‘

  The lady in the straw hat laughed uproariously.

  Omally raised an eyebrow.

  ‘I don’t get it,’ said Old Pete.

  ‘Young Master Robert came in here earlier,’ said Neville, presenting John with his pints.

  ‘Oh,’ said John. ‘Did he?’

  ‘He was looking for you. I asked him about the decor.’

  ‘Oh yes?’ said John.

  ‘He said they’d be coming in to change it all back tomorrow.’

  ‘Oh good,’ said John.

  ‘And I gave him your home address.’

  ‘Oh bliss,’ said John. ‘Are these on the house, by the way?’

  ‘No,’ said Neville. ‘They’re not.’

  ‘Chimpanzee,’ said Old Pete. ‘No, nun, no chimney sweep––’

  ‘I wonder when we’ll hear from the wee boy,’ said John, returning to Jim’s pew.

  ‘Cain? That was wrong, you know, letting him go off with the disc.’

  ‘He seemed to know what he was up to. He seemed to know every damn thing.’

  ‘It will all go guggy,’ said Jim. ‘It was all too fast.’

  ‘No it won’t, it will be fine. There was something about him, wasn’t there? Something almost inspirational. I don’t know how to describe it.’

  ‘Nor me, but I know what you mean. Very strange.’

  ‘Very strange indeed.’

  ‘The Midwich Cuckoo, you called him.’

  ‘He’s a pretty weird lad.’

  ‘Not that weird,’ said Cain.

  ‘Aaaaagh!’ went Jim.

  ‘I’ll join you in one of those,’ said John. ‘Aaaaagh!’

  ‘I’m sorry,’ said Cain. ‘Did I startle you?’

  ‘You’re not supposed to be in here,’ whispered Jim. ‘You’re under age.’

  ‘But this is a church, isn’t it?’ Cain glanced around.

  ‘No,’ said Jim, ‘it’s not a church. It’s a pub.’

  ‘Den of Vice,’ said Cain. ‘D is for Den of Vice. Also depravity, debauchery, dereliction, dipsomania, delirium tremens––’

  ‘Delight and dominoes,’ said John.

  ‘Dominoes?’ said Jim.

  ‘Discussion,’ said John. ‘A place of discussion.’

  ‘Drink not only water,’ said Cain, ‘but take a little wine for thy stomach’s sake.’

  ‘My sentiments entirely. How did it go with the disc? Did you––’

  ‘All wrong,’ said Jim. ‘This is so wrong.’

  ‘I put it into the computer,’ said Cain. ‘In Penge, which is a very nice place, I might add.’

  ‘You did it?’ Jim shook his head. ‘And nobody saw you do it?’

  ‘I don’t have to be seen if I don’t want to be.’

  ‘Buy the child a lemonade,’ said Jim. ‘And a packet of crisps.’

  ‘I’d prefer a gin and tonic,’ said Cain.

  ‘Cup of tea?’ asked Clive.

  ‘I’d prefer a gin and tonic,’ said Derek.

  ‘That’s hardly a macho drink, Derek.’

  ‘James Bond used to drink Martini. And he was pretty macho.’

  ‘Martini is a tart’s drink.’

  ‘Babycham is a tart’s drink.’

  ‘No, a Bacardi and coke is a tart’s drink.’

  ‘Posh tart’s drink.’

  ‘I’ve never met a posh tart.’

  ‘Is a tart the same as a slapper?’

  ‘ Aaaaaaaaaaaagh!’

  ‘It wasn’t an unreasonable question.’

  ‘It wasn’t me going “Aaaaaaaaaaaagh!” ’

  ‘Who was it then?’

  ‘Aaaaaaaaaaaagh!’

  ‘Fred,’ said Derek. ‘It was Fred.’

  Clive and Derek raced along the Corridor of Power. They reached the Chamber of Power. Derek won by a short head. Clive pushed open the mighty door.

  ‘Aaaaaaaaaaaagh!’ went Fred again. He was standing behind his desk. The desk was still covered by the dust sheet. Not too much more had been done to the ceiling. Fred held a computer print-out in his hand. It was one of those financial jobbies. A bank statement affair. Fred went ‘Aaaaaaaaaaaagh!’ once again.

  27

  Now Small Dave was a postman. A postman, Small Dave was.

  At one time he had the reputation for being a vindictive grudge-bearing wee bastard. But after a very nasty experience involving the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe, a zero-gravity camel named Simon and a mothership from the lost planet Ceres, he had mellowed somewhat and was now, for the most part, quite easy-going.

  For the most part. But not this morning.

  This morning Small Dave was all in a lather. All in a lather and a regular foam. He’d arrived at the Brentford Sorting Office with the not-unreasonable expectation of finding the usual two sacks of mail awaiting him.

  But not this morning.

  This morning there were twenty-three sacks.

  ‘Aaaaaagh!’ went Small Dave, all in a lather and a regular foam. ‘Twenty-three sacks! Aaaaagh!’

  Mrs Elronhubbard the postmistress looked Small Dave up and down. Though mostly down, due to his lack of inches.

  ‘I’m terribly sorry, Small Dave,’ said she. ‘But all these printed pamphlets arrived last night and one is to go into every single letterbox in Brentford.’

  ‘Outrage!’ Small Dave knotted a dolly-sized fist and shook it. ‘Outrage! Outrage! Outrage!’

  ‘I’m sorry, but there it is.’

  Small Dave kicked the nearest sack, s
pilling out its contents. He stooped (though not very far) and plucked up a pamphlet. And at this he glared, fiercely.

  FREE MONEY ran the headline, in a manner calculated to gain the reader’s attention.

  ‘Eh?’ went Small Dave.

  THE BRENTFORD MILLENNIUM FUND IS OFFERING YOU A CHANCE TO SHARE IN THE BOROUGH’S GOOD FORTUNE.

  ‘Oh,’ went Small Dave.

  ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS COME UP WITH A PROJECT FOR THE NEW YEAR’S CELEBRATIONS AND THE FUND WILL GIVE YOU ALL THE CASH YOU NEED.

  ‘It’s a wind-up,’ said Small Dave.

  THIS IS NOT A WIND-UP.

  ‘Blimey,’ said Small Dave.

  SO FILL IN THE ATTACHED APPLICATION FORM. STICK IT IN THE ATTACHED PRE-PAID ENVELOPE AND POP THAT INTO AN UNATTACHED POST BOX. AND LOTS OF MONEY WILL BE YOURS!

  ‘Incredible,’ said Small Dave.

  YES, ISN’T IT!

  ‘Paragliding,’ said Mrs Elronhubbard.

  ‘What?’ went Small Dave.

  ‘Synchronized paragliding, like synchronized swimming only up in the sky. I’m going to put in for a grant.’

  ‘But you’re nearly eighty.’

  ‘You’re only as old as the men you feel.’

  Small Dave sighed. ‘Sometimes I feel like a motherless child,’ said he. ‘But of course there’s a law against that kind of thing.’

  ‘Quite,’ said Mrs Elronhubbard. ‘And there should be another about recycling old gags. So, Small Dave, up and at it.’

  ‘I am up.’

  ‘Oh, so you are. Well then, get at it.’

  Small Dave made grumbling noises. ‘It’s no use,’ he complained. ‘It takes me nearly a day to deliver two sacks. It would take me a month to deliver this lot.’

  ‘Then God bless the Brentford Millennium Committee.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘They’ve supplied you with ten part-time workers, who are out in the car park even now, awaiting your orders.’

  ‘My orders?’

  ‘Yours. You have been awarded the title, Millennial Postman First Class and your salary’s been doubled.’

  ‘Oh.’ Small Dave puffed out his pigeon chest. ‘Right then, let’s get to it.’

  ‘Well,’ said Professor Slocombe, reading through the pamphlet. ‘When you get to it, John, you certainly get to it.’