The Toyminator (21 page)

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Authors: Robert Rankin

Tags: #sf_humor, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #Humorous, #Teddy bears, #Apocalypse in literature, #Toys

BOOK: The Toyminator
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“Nasty,” said Dorothy. “But I’m sure he leapt from the car in time.”

They were now, and praise the Lord for this also, travelling along Route 66. They were, they
really
were. Not that they were running from St Louis down to Missouri, taking in Oklahoma City, which everybody knows is oh so pretty. They were in fact passing Horse Thief Canyon Park, La Verne, Cable Airport and now Rancho Cucamonga, where a young Don Van Vliet, who would later change his name to Captain Beefheart and become a legend in his lifetime, would as a teenager try to sell a vacuum cleaner to Aldous Huxley.
[35]

It’s a really long straight road there, above San Bernardino. You can get up an unhealthy speed if you really put your foot down. Which was what the gay officer, whose day was yet to dawn, was doing. His police car overtook Sam’s, much to Sam’s disgust, because
his
police car had just overtaken
his
. The gay officer’s police car now drew level with Dorothy’s. The gay officer addressed Dorothy through his public-address system, which is located somewhere on police cars, although no one has ever been able to ascertain exactly where.

“Give yourselves up,” came his amplified voice through the special speaker in the radiator grille.
[36]
“There’s no need for all this kerfuffle. You don’t really want to behave in this fashion. It’s not your fault – you are a product of your upbringing, you are programmed to behave in this way. I have this self-help manual I could lend you –”

Dorothy swerved the car and drove the gay officer off the road. His car, once again in glorious slow motion, sailed from Route 66 and down onto the famous California Speedway, where numerous speeding motorbikes, with very nice leather-clad riders, the gay officer noted, before all things went black for him, came all a-mashing into his rear parts and everywhere else.

“Right,” said Sam. “I’m angry now.” And he leaned out of his window and fired his gun once more.

And there at last it was.

Because we
have
been expecting its arrival for some time now, if only subconsciously. But there it was at last, that great big truck, with its great big dangerous cargo on the back. It was being driven towards them at considerable speed by a trucker called Joe-Bob, who was, coincidentally –

And who was also chatting on the CB to a fellow trucker called Joe-Bob, who was, coincidentally –

“Well, that’s a big ten-four,” said driver Joe-Bob. “Heading for the City of Angels on Route Sixty-Six. Pulling turkey with a shorthaired rabbit. Doing a manky dance rattle on my blue suede shoes.”
[37]

“Come on?” said the driver called Joe-Bob at the message-receiving end.

“I said … Oh, Goddamn!”

And, “Goddamn!” also went Police Chief Sam Maggott as Dorothy swerved around the on-rushing truck and Sam Maggott’s car struck it dead on.

Boom.

In slow motion.

Of course.

 

Some time later, Dorothy drew the raddled, bullet-pocked black-and-white to the side of the road, climbed from it and opened the boot.

Jack peered out. “Are we still alive?” he asked.

“We’re fine,” said Dorothy. “We’ve shaken them off.”

Jack climbed out in a wibbly-wobbly way. “How did you learn to drive like
that
?” he asked.

“My daddy won the Indianapolis Five Hundred,” said Dorothy. “Oh, look, there’s a police uniform in the trunk.”

“I know,” said Jack, dusting down his all-but-naked self. “I’ve been fighting with it for several miles. It smells really bad.”

“Well, you’d best put it on. Then you can drive for a bit. We don’t want to arouse suspicion.”

Jack’s jaw dropped. “Well, no,” said he. “We wouldn’t want to do
that
.”

And Dorothy smiled upon Jack and said, “Well, hurry up now, come on.”

Jack dressed himself in the uniform, and but for its acrid qualities it did have to be said that he cut a rather dashing and romantic figure. He settled down into what was left of the driving seat.

Dorothy sat beside him. “Mmm,” she said to Jack.

“Mmm?” Jack asked. “What means ‘Mmm’?”

“As in, ‘Mmm, you look cute.’”

“Cute?” said Jack. “A teddy bear looks cute.”

“Not your one,” said Dorothy.

And Jack once more thought of Eddie. Not that Eddie had slipped Jack’s mind, but what with all the excitement and everything …

 

Eddie Bear lacked for excitement. In his cage many floors beneath the Nevada desert in Area Fifty-Two, Eddie Bear was having a bit of a snooze. And then things suddenly became exciting for Eddie, or perhaps “alarming” was better the word.

Eddie awoke as hands were laid upon him. Rough were these hands, although not in texture. Rough as in violent and forceful.

“Ow!” went Eddie. “That’s as rude as. Get off me.”

But Eddie was hauled from his cage by the other Jack and flung to a concrete floor.

“There’s no need for that!”

And then the other Jack kicked him.

“Oh!” went Eddie, climbing to his paw pads. “You are
so
going to get yours when
my
Jack gets here.”

“No one is going to rescue you.” The other Jack took a big step forward. Eddie took several steps back. “Along the corridor, hurry now.”

Eddie turned and plodded up the corridor. It was one of those all-over-concrete kind of jobbies with bulkhead lights at regular intervals. The number twenty-three
[38]
was painted on the walls at similarly regular intervals. Eddie assumed, correctly, that this meant that he was on the twenty-third level beneath the ground.

“Where are you taking me?” Eddie asked.

“To meet your maker,” said the other Jack.

“My maker was Mister Anders Anders,” said Eddie, “the kindly, lovable white-haired old Toymaker.”

The other Jack laughed and his laugh all echoed around. “He’ll soon have his work cut out for him,” he said.

“And what does
that
mean?” Eddie asked.

“In twelve hours from now,” said the other Jack, “Toy City will be wiped from the map. If there
is
a map with it on. My employer will suck it dry of all life. Lay it to waste. Oh yes.”

“Why?” Eddie asked. “To what purpose?”

“Why?” asked the other Jack. “Because we can. And to what purpose? To further our own ends.”

“Now, I’m only guessing here,” said Eddie, turning and peering up at the other Jack, “but would these ‘own ends’ be of the world-domination persuasion?”

“You’ll know soon enough.” The other Jack nudged Eddie with his shoe. “Now get a move on. To the elevator.”

“Where am I?” asked Eddie. “Tell me where I am.”

 

“Where are we?” asked Jack. “Exactly.”

He was making good progress, considering he had never driven a car with an internal combustion engine before. He’d almost got the hang of the gears.

Dorothy flinched as Jack changed from second to fourth.

“Exactly?” she said. “We are travelling North on Interstate Fifteen. We just passed Las Vegas, which you would probably have liked, lots of lights and things like that. We are heading towards the Nevada desert.”

“And is that good?” Jack asked. “Only I’m not sure what we should be doing next. The plan was to follow the American Dream. Find the top man. Beat the truth out of him.”

“Perhaps you were over-hasty bringing that meat-cleaver into play. But look on the bright side – at least we got to meet Marilyn Monroe and Sydney Greenstreet. I wish I’d got their autographs. And the names of their agents and –”

“Stop now,” said Jack. “We’ll have to go back to LA. We need the movie script. I’m sure a lot will be explained when we read it.”

“LA is no longer an option,” said Dorothy. “And I don’t know where this leaves my career. I know that it’s expected of starlets to do disreputable things that will later come back to haunt them when they become famous, but I might just have stepped too far over the line this time.”

Jack sighed, changed from fourth to first, changed hastily back again and said, “You do talk some toot at times.”

“Not a bit of it,” said Dorothy. “The people who get to the top in this world do so because they are risk-takers. They thrive upon risk. Every woman or man at the top has a shady past. They’ve all done things that they wouldn’t want their contemporaries to find out about. They wouldn’t want these things to come out once they are famous, but they’re not ashamed that they did these things. They did them because they got a thrill out of them. They did them because they are risk-takers.”

“So what are you saying?” Jack asked, as he performed another interesting gear change. “That it’s all right to do bad things?”

“It’s never right to do bad things. Bad things hurt good people.”

“I don’t mean to be bad,” said Jack.

“You’re not bad,” said Dorothy.

“I am,” said Jack. “I’m selfish. I put myself first.”


Everyone
does that.”

“Eddie doesn’t,” said Jack. “Eddie would risk anything to protect me, I know he would.”

“And you would do the same for him.”

“Of course I would,” said Jack. “But time is running out for Eddie and if I don’t find him soon and take him back to Toy City he will die.”

“You’ll find him,” said Dorothy. “Somehow.”

 

“Somehow,” thought Eddie, “Jack will find me somehow.”

“Into the elevator,” said the other Jack. “Go on now.”

Eddie entered the elevator. The other Jack joined him, pressed a button, the doors closed, the elevator rose. Eddie Bear fumed. Silently.

And then the doors took to opening and Eddie Bear gazed out.

And wondered at the view that lay before him.

It looked to be a big round room with shiny metal walls. There were all kinds of strange machines in this room. Strange machines with twinkling lights upon them, being attended to by men in white coats who all looked strangely alike.

“Where are we now?” asked Eddie.

“Central operations room,” said the other Jack. “Go on now.”

“I do wish you’d stop saying that. It’s as repetitive as.”

“Go on
now
.” And the other Jack kicked Eddie.

 

“But where shall we go
now
?” Jack asked.

“How about somewhere to eat?” asked Dorothy. “Lunch would be nice.”

“I’m really not hungry.” But Jack’s stomach rumbled.

“We do need a plan of some kind,” said Dorothy.

“Plan?” said Jack. “What we need is a miracle.” Jack hunched over the wheel.

Presently they approached a route-side eatery. It was a Golden Chicken Diner. Jack drove hurriedly past it.

Somewhat later, with the police car making those alarming coughing sounds that cars will make when they are running out of fuel, they approached another eatery: Haley’s Comet Lounge.

“This will do us fine,” said Dorothy.

The car clunked up to a petrol pump.
[39]

A tall man with short hair smiled out from the shade of a veranda. He wore a drab grey mechanic’s overall that accentuated his drab greyness and wiped his hands upon an oily rag, which implied an intimate knowledge of automobiles.

“Howdy, officer,” said he as Jack wound down what was left of his window. “Suu-ee, what the Hell happened here?”

“Nothing to concern yourself with,” said Jack.

Dorothy leaned over him. And Jack sniffed her hair. “Fill her up,” said Dorothy, “and check the oil, please, and the suspension.”

“Have to put her up on the ramp for that, ma’am.”

“Fine, please do it.”

Dorothy led Jack off to eat as the drab grey mechanic drove the stolen police car into the garage.
[40]

“It’s best out of sight,” said Dorothy to Jack as they entered the eatery.

“Do you have money?” Jack asked as he patted his uniform pockets. “Because I don’t.”

“Leave all the talking to me.”

The eatery was everything that it should have been. Everything in its right place. Long bar along the right-hand wall. Tables to the left with window views of Interstate 15. A great many framed photographs upon the walls, mostly of men in sporting attire holding large fish.

There were some trophies on a shelf behind the bar, silver trophies topped by figures of men in sporting attire holding large fish.

Behind the bar counter stood a short man with tall hair. He wore sporting attire and held a large fish.

“Good afternoon, officer, ma’am,” said he. “Would you care to take a number?”

“A number?” said Jack. “What do you mean?”

“So that I can seat you. In the right order.”

“But there’s just the two of us.”

“In the right order to be served.”

“There’s still just the two of us.”

“Take a number,” said Dorothy.

“Can I have
any
number?” Jack asked.

“You can have
this
number,” said the short man with tall hair. And he placed his fish upon the countertop, peeled a number from what looked to be a date-a-day calendar jobbie on the wall next to a framed picture of a man in sporting attire holding –

“Can we sit anywhere?” Jack asked. And he viewed the tables. All were empty.

“What number do you have?” asked the short man.

“Twenty-three,”
[41]
said Jack.

“Then you’re in luck. Table over there, by the window.”

Dorothy and Jack sat down at this table.

“Was I supposed to understand any of that?” Jack asked.

“What’s to understand?” asked Dorothy, and she took up a menu. It was a fish-shaped menu. Jack took up one similar.

“So,” said the short man, suddenly beside them, “allow me to introduce myself. My name is Guy and I will be your waiter. Can I recommend to you today’s specials?”

Jack looked up at the short man called Guy. “Why don’t you give it a go?”

“Right,” said the short man called Guy, and he drew a tall breath.

And sang a jolly song.

 

We have carp from Arizona

And perch from Buffalo,

A great big trout

With a shiny snout

From the shores of Idaho.

 

We’ve a pike called Spike

And I’m sure you’d like

A bowl of fries with him.

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