Read The Bomber Balloon Online
Authors: Terry Deary
Peldon, Essex, 24th Sept 1916
Millie Watson screamed. She wasn't afraid of the dark. But when she ran into the man, as solid as a brown-backed bear, she screamed.
She had been running through the dark and empty streets. The gas street lamps were never turned on at night now. âThe balloon bombers will see the lamps and drop their bombs on our house,' her mum had explained as she heated the clothes iron over the fire.
Dad had been sitting at the far side of the fireplace, smoking a pipe and reading the newspaper. âHow many times do I have to tell you, Mrs Watson, they are not balloon bombers â they are Zeppelins.'
âYes, Mr Watson,' her mother replied, âbut we aren't all clever like you. Some of us don't understand words like zippy-things. All our Millie needs to know is they are big balloons that drop nasty bombs.'
Mr Watson's moustache bristled as he sighed. âZeppelins are large frames of wood or metal as long as our street. They are covered with canvas and filled with gas. They are so light they can carry twenty men and fifty bombs.'
Mrs Watson turned from ironing the shirt to Millie. âHe just read that in the paper. He reads that paper and believes every word. Then he repeats it like a parrot
to his mates in the pub. They think he's the brainiest bloke in Britain. But really he's just a parrot.'
Mr Watson sniffed and ignored her.
âSquawk, squawk. Who's a pretty boy then?' Mrs Watson said.
Her husband poked at the dusty coal on the fire. âTime I went to the pub,' he said.
Mrs Watson turned to Millie again. âWe're short of food â not enough bread and butter and milk and eggs to go around. But those men still manage to find beer.'
âI am going to a meeting,' Mr Watson said. âThe Royal Defence group want to talk about DORA.'
âDora Potts in our class?' Millie asked.
âNo, child,' Mrs Watson said. âDefence Of the Realm Act⦠D-O-R-A. All the things we have to do, now we are at war. DORA is just rules you have to stick to or the policeman will send you to prison.'
Mr Watson shrugged himself into his coat and placed his cap on his head. âThe people who break the rules will be fined, Mrs Watson â not sent to prison. And the police are too busy to do it, so the men of the town will form a Royal Defence Army.
We will patrol the streets and make sure DORA is obeyed.'
âYou'll enjoy that,' Mrs Watson muttered.
âA man must do his duty.'
Mrs Watson folded her arms. âThat's telling us, Millie. But if you ask me, it's just an excuse to go to the pub.'
Mr Watson picked up his newspaper, folded it neatly and slid it into his pocket. âI will be back laterâ¦'
âIf a zippy-thing doesn't drop a bomb on your head,' his wife said.
As Mr Watson left she folded her ironing, took up her knitting and clicked away quietly while Millie picked up a book. It was called
The Flower Fairies
and Miss Jepson, her teacher, had let Millie take it home to practise her reading.
âNice book?' her mum asked.
âFairies,' Millie said with a sigh. âThe boys get to read proper books about war and fighting. I have to read about fairies.'
Mrs Watson smiled. âWhy not run along to the corner shop on Mersea Road? The woman next door says they are getting some eggs delivered tonight. Take sixpence out of the tea caddy and run and see if you can get us some.'
Millie threw down the book, collected
the silvery coin and raced out of the house into the dark street.
The old man who lit the gas lamps with a long pole never came around the streets now. Not since the war against Germany started. Millie often wondered what had happened to the old man.
Her thin boots were slapping on the pavements, her thinner hair streaming
behind her, and her mouth open and panting. Millie loved running.
The houses had heavy curtains at the windows but there was still a glow in the streets. Enough for her to race along the roads without falling.
She dodged around the lampposts and the pillar-boxes and into Church Road. She knew what was coming and giggled as she gasped and ran. There, on the doorstep of number 17, Mac the dog was waiting. A sandy-coloured dog with a tattered ear. A mongrel with a bad temper and a yap like a broken hinge.
Mac heard Millie's slapping soles before she turned the corner and a growl grew in his throat. When he saw the running girl his little black teddy-bear eyes glowed like coals. He leapt forward, yapping madly and snapping at her flying heels.
âCan't catch me!' she screamed. That wasn't true. But Mac wanted to warn her off, not bite her. She knew that when she reached the end of his road he would stop.
Millie turned the corner and backed down Mersea Road, panting and giggling. That was how she walked into the man who was solid as a bear.
And that was when Millie screamed.
âNow then, now, then, now then,' the man growled. He was almost invisible in the darkness in his uniform of midnight blue. All Millie could see was his pale moon-face and the silver buttons on his jacket.
âGood evening, Constable Smith,' Millie said.
âYoung Millie Watson, isn't it?'
âYes, Constable.'
âDo you realise you have put the whole of Essex in danger, young lady?' he said fiercely.
âMe?' she squeaked. âHow?'
âShush,' he hissed. âLook over there, towards Mersea Island. What can you see?'
Fingers of yellow-white light criss-crossed the sky. There were orange flashes sparkling round. âOoooh! It's like Bonfire Night,' Millie said. âLike before the war.'
Constable Smith sighed. âThe lights are searchlights over the Thames â forty or fifty miles away. The flashes are the anti-aircraft shells exploding. Mark my words, there are Zeppelins about tonight. You know what a Zeppelin is?'
Millie nodded. âThey are large frames of wood or metal as long as our street. They
are covered with canvas and filled with gas lamps. They are so light they can carry twenty thousand men and fifty thousand bombs.'
Constable Smith coughed. âNot quite that many, but enough to make a big hole in your house. And do you know how they will find your house?'
âNo, Constable Smith.'
âThey will find it because they will fly over the town, they will switch off their engines, and they will hear every sound. They will hear that dog barking and say, “Aha! Where there's dogs, there's people”. And they'll drop a bomb.'
âOn Mac the dog? That's not fair.'
âAnd it will all be your fault for making him bark. See? Now, have you heard of DORA?' the policeman asked.
âThe Defence Of the Rum Act.'