âGood lord,' she said.
In a way it was really rather beautiful. Peaceful, certainly. The drivers of the cars had mostly had the sense to switch off their engines and they were now simply drifting aimlessly, a few inches off the ground, while airborne pedestrians hung on to their door handles. A school of red buses sailed gently past the request stop opposite the corner shop, while the newsagent's stock in trade sailed gracefully, almost majestically, into the air, flapping their leaves like enormous, slow-motion herons.
An open umbrella fluttered away past her window on its way to the stars.
âYou see what I mean?' said a voice above her.
She looked upwards to see Staff flat on his back against the ceiling. She tried not to laugh, but there are limits.
âI'm sorry,' she said. âBut you look so . . .'
âI know,' he replied sadly. âYou think you're having problems. Just count yourself lucky you've got a corporeal body. You have no idea how difficult it was getting here.'
Jane pushed hard on her umbrella, and the table rose upwards. She was just able to grab hold of Staff's left foot before it fell floorwards again, and she towed her visitor down with her. As she had expected, he weighed nothing.
A little undignified scrambling enabled Staff to get on the table, and he secured himself to it by wrapping his arms round one of the legs. Even so, the lower half of his body pointed resolutely upwards, with the result that he looked like nothing so much as a large, respectable tadpole.
âAnyway,' he said. âSurely now you can't deny that there's a problem.'
âOh, there's a problem all right,' Jane agreed. âLike how I'm going to get coffee stains off the ceiling. It's Artex, you know.'
âI gathered,' Staff replied. âIt's like sandpaper, that stuff. Oughtn't to be allowed.'
âSorry.'
âNot your fault. Look,' he went on, âunless we find some way of getting things sorted out, it's going to get worse. You must see that.'
âBut,' Jane started to say; then she corrected herself. âAre you sure I'd be able to help?' she said.
âYes,' Staff replied, âyou and others like you, but you
first.You see, if you make a go of it, we can recruit others. Management won't be able to stop us. We'll be able to fill all the vacant posts, get the plant and machinery properly serviced; that way, we won't have all our staff and resources tied down coping with emergencies.' He paused to fence away a teapot that seemed to want to get inside his jacket. âCome on,' he said, âwhat do you say? Anything's got to be better than this.'
Suddenly, the world started to move again. For a split second, Jane felt it distinctly; the violent shock of an incredibly rapid acceleration, rather like the awful feeling you get the first time you're in an aeroplane taking off. Then she was rather too preoccupied with the spectacle of all her possessions falling to the ground and smashing into tiny pieces to bother with detailed observations of that kind.
âRight,' she said and, using her thumb and forefinger, picked a razor-sharp shard of casserole out of her hair. Outside, the air was suddenly full of the sound of many motorists restored to normality and lamenting their lost no-claims bonuses with the help of their horns. The last glossy magazine twirled a few times in the air and flopped to earth like an exhausted pigeon.
âYou're on,' she said.
Â
âTell me,' said Gustav tremulously, âall about it.'
The fire burnt low, so that the interior of Gustav's small but cosy cottage became full of deep shadows, each one a curtained doorway into hostile infinity. Using his teeth only, Bjorn removed the crown cap off a bottle of Carlsberg and spat it accurately into the grate.
âNot a lot to tell, really,' he said. âI applied for the job, got it, tried it, didn't like it, told them to stuff it, moved on. Simple as that.'
âUm,' said Gustav, âyes, I suppose it is, really. But tell
me,' he went on, overcoming his feelings of acute apprehension. âWhat was it really like? Being an angel, I mean.'
There was a silence: a huge, heavy, abrasive silence you could have ground corn with. The firelight glinted red on Bjorn's eyes, making Gustav shrink back into the chimney corner.
âYou ever call me that again,' Bjorn growled, âI'll pull your lungs out through your nose and make you eat them, okay?'
âI'm very sorry,' Gustav squeaked. âI'd got the impression . . .'
âBecause,' Bjorn went on, âwe don't like that name, right? It's a poncey name. Makes you sound like a right fairy, being called that.' He paused to glower savagely into the fire. âMakes you think of little lacy dolls with wings and Christmas trees shoved up their jacksies. Anybody tries that with me, they'll get what's coming to them, understood?'
âUnderstood.'
âFine.' Bjorn took a long pull of beer and burped assertively. âThe lads and me, we used to call ourselves “the Boys from the Blue Stuff ”. Sounds better, you know, meaner. More macho. And we didn't fart around playing harps, either.'
âAbsolutely not,' Gustav agreed, nodding furiously. âRight on,' he added.
âRight on what?'
âSorry.'
Bjorn drank some more beer and scratched his ear thoughtfully. âI'm not saying we didn't have a few laughs, mind. I mean, it wasn't all answering prayers and polishing the sun. Bloody awful job, that was,' he parenthesised, âtook all the skin off your knuckles if you weren't careful.
Bloke I worked with, he got his fingers caught in the works when he was trying to clean them out and nobody
noticed. They launched the damn thing same as usual and he was left there, trapped, dangling by his fingers, yelling his head off, but nobody heard. You just imagine that,' he went on, after a deep shudder that started just below his neck and finally earthed itself out through the soles of his feet. âJust imagine it, hanging by your fingers from that bloody great hot thing, miles above the ground, for a whole day. And when he tried to get compensation, what did they say? Should have observed the safety procedure, they said, all his own silly fault, served him right. He went a bit funny in the head after that so they put him on Earthquakes. Nobody notices if you're a bit funny in the head on Earthquakes.'
âI see,' said Gustav. âWell . . .'
âWe were always having them,' Bjorn ground on, staring straight in front of him into the fire. âIndustrial accidents they called them, only some of them weren't accidents if you ask me. You can't tell me a grown man suddenly falling off a perfectly wide, fenced-off catwalk into the works of the grass-growing plant was an accident, or a coincidence. Just so happened he'd found out about the foreman and the cocoa money, that's all. Of course, they hushed it up. Blamed it all on the frosts, they did.'
Gustav smiled and tried to seep away into the cracks between the stones, but there was too much of him for that. âGosh,' he said.
âRight bastards, some of those foremen were, mind,' Bjorn went on. âThere was one when I was on Miracles - some years ago, this is, because they've closed that department down now. Evil Neville, they used to call him. Short, round bloke, face like a road map. Whenever we were told to turn water into wine, he'd be in there with his mates and a couple of hundred jerrycans, and the poor bloody punters would have to make do with water turned into lager. Couldn't tell the difference half the
time. No wonder the whole department got such a bad name with the high-ups. Talking of which, you got any more?'
He waved the empty bottle, and Gustav, simpering, fetched another. It had cobwebs on it.
âCheers,' Bjorn said. He decapitated it, absent-mindedly swallowed the top, and slurped deeply.
âIt sounds very unpleasant,' Gustav said.
âUnpleasant!' Bjorn sniggered noisily. âYou're telling me, sunshine. I could tell you some stories, no worries. What about that time we were working Nights and Norm the Headbanger got completely rat-arsed and left his brother's old van parked right in the middle of the Great Bear? Or there was that time Mad Trev and me were working on Rivers, and Trev got taken short just before the flooding of the Nile. Those Egyptians sure got a shock that year, I'm telling you.' He laughed brutally. Gustav closed his eyes and felt sick. He had a little picture of an angel over his bed: his mother had put it there years ago, telling him that it would watch over him while he was asleep. As soon as he was alone in the house again, he told himself, he'd get a shovel and bury it under the oak tree.
âNot that it was all bad, mind,' Bjorn was saying. âThere was guard duty, f'rinstance. I liked that. They gave you this flaming sword and you stood about in front of the gates of Eden, and anybody who was daft enough to try and get in there - shunk!' He made a sharp, graphically illustrative movement with the bottle, spilling the few remaining suds it contained over the back of his hand. âDon't get up,' he said. âIn that cupboard, right?'
He lurched to his feet and went to the cupboard. Gustav shut his eyes.
âHere,' he heard Bjorn call out. âThere's no more beer
left, that's a bummer. Hold on, though, this'll do. Cheers.' Oh wonderful, Gustav thought, he's found the paint thinners.
âHelp yourself,' he said, in a small, tinny voice he barely recognised as his own.
âAnyway,' Bjorn said, sitting by the fire again and wiping the neck of the bottle. âI stuck it as long as I could, but in the end I couldn't stick it any more.'
âReally?'
âYeah.' Bjorn drew heavily on the bottle, winced and licked his lips. âI reckoned it was, well, brutalising me, you know? Like, when I was young they said I was sort of sensitive, you know, feelings and all that. So I reckoned, if I stick this job any longer, what's going to happen to me? I could end up turning into a really nasty person if I wasn't careful. So I quit. Probably I was just imagining it,' he added, âbut you can't be too careful, right? I mean, there's integrity, for one thing.'
âEr, right.'
âSo,' Bjorn said. Then he sat silently for a very long eight seconds, glaring viciously into the fire. Just as Gustav was beginning to feel a scream welling up inside the pit of his stomach, Bjorn got up, drained the bottle, and put it down on the table with a bang. âYou know what,' he said, âit's done me good, you know, talking about it. I feel -' he burped savagely â- much better now. In fact, we must do this again sometime, right?'
Gustav closed his eyes. On the one hand, his mother had told him never to tell deliberate lies. On the other hand, his mother had told him a lot of stuff about angels that had turned out to be rather wide of the mark.
âRight,' he said. âI'd like that.'
âYeah.' Bjorn rose to his feet, groped for his axe, and staggered clumsily to the door.
âStrewth,' he said, poking his head out into the cool,
sweet, night air and sniffing distastefully. âSmells like armpits out here. Cheers, then.'
âCheers.'
Gustav closed the door after his guest, bolted it, put the shutters up, and collapsed into his chair, trembling. From the distant village street he could hear the distinctive sound of a man with an axe playing Try-Your-Strength games with the village pump. He winced.
The picture of the angel disappeared from above Gustav's bed shortly afterwards, and was replaced by a Pirelli calendar.
Â
âOh,' said the charge-hand.
Far below, an enormous brown snake of muddy, foulsmelling water thrust its snout into the gaps between the skyscrapers. Apart from the occasional crash of falling masonry, the great city was quite astoundingly quiet.
âI thought you meant Memphis,
Tennessee
,' the chargehand went on, slightly apprehensively. âSo there's another Memphis, is there? That's confusing.'
âIsn't it?' his superior replied, through tight lips. âSorry, perhaps I should have explained a bit better. I thought it'd be clear, even to a complete idiot, that when I said flood the Nile as far as Memphis, I meant Memphis, Egypt. Obviously, though, I was wrong.' He pushed his cap on to the back of his head and scratched his bald patch thoughtfully. âYou know what,' he added, after a moment. âThis is going to take a bit of sorting out, this is.'
âAh.'
âI mean,' he went on, âjust to take the small details first, there's your crocodiles, right?'
âCrocodiles?'
âCrocodiles.' He pointed. âMust've got swept along with the current or something. Look, there's one now, just
crawling up the steps of the Fire Department building.'
âOh yes, I can just make it out. Gosh, that's . . .'
âAnd in ten minutes,' his superior went on, âwhen we whack all the pumps back into reverse and start draining the water away . . . Well, there's going to be a lot of them left behind, right?'
âUm.'
âBut,' his superior went on, âthat's really a minor point, and probably nobody's going to notice, what with rebuilding the whole goddamn city, and flying in emergency aid, and what not. Still, I just thought I'd mention it. Let you have the fully-rounded picture, so to speak.'
âRight.' The charge-hand nodded. âGot that.'
âThere's also,' his superior went on, his face gradually tightening like an overstretched guitar-string, âthe fact that the Egyptians are now one river short. They're not going to be pleased, you know. I get the feeling they're, you know, attached to it.'
âYes?'
His superior nodded. âYou been working in this department long?' he asked. The charge-hand did some mental arithmetic.