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- Xref: sparky talk.bizarre:38179 alt.prose:1523
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!pavo.csi.cam.ac.uk!pipex!ibmpcug!mantis!mathew
- From: mathew@mantis.co.uk (mathew)
- Newsgroups: talk.bizarre,alt.prose
- Subject: Battlefield
- Message-ID: <XLV5TB2w165w@mantis.co.uk>
- Date: 12 Nov 92 15:59:32 GMT
- Followup-To: talk.bizarre,alt.prose.d
- Organization: Mantis Consultants, Cambridge. UK.
- Lines: 277
-
-
- Battlefield
- by mathew <mathew@mantis.co.uk>
-
- Alex flattened himself onto the soft earth. The ferns would probably conceal
- him adequately, but if the enemy saw him it would mean failure, maybe even
- death. He tried to slow his breathing to an almost silent whisper, and
- listened intently to the voices of the two men as they approached.
-
- "...want regular patrols in this area."
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "And you, Lieutenant, are to report to me personally, the moment any of your
- men sees anything suspicious, understand?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "We've got a big offensive planned in the next few hours, and the last thing
- we want is for saboteurs to sneak in and destroy our Jeeps."
-
- "Jeeps, sir?" The Lieutenant sounded momentarily confused.
-
- "Yes, Jeeps. This is a military operation. Remember that."
-
- Alex began to sweat. They had stopped walking, and were standing beneath a
- tree only metres away from him. If they came any closer they were bound to
- see him. He cursed his luck at being too large to fit into even the biggest
- military uniform back at base.
-
- "Yes General. Er... Sir?"
-
- "What is it man?"
-
- "Shouldn't we be getting back now, sir? You told Mister... er, Commander
- Jenkins that your tour of inspection would only take a few minutes."
-
- "Oh... very well. Lead the way."
-
- They walked briskly back the way they had come, and Alex let out a slow sigh
- of relief. Once he was sure they were out of earshot, he reached into his
- jacket pocket and took out his red and yellow Mr. Microphone, sliding the
- power switch on.
-
- "Hello, Control? This is Walsh. I'm behind enemy lines. Over?"
-
- He stared at Mr. Microphone for a moment, then suddenly felt very foolish.
-
- "Er, sorry Control. I forgot. I wish you'd given me one of those walkie-
- talkies. It's not fair, Atkinson gets all the good stuff. Just because he
- gave you a present at the Christmas party."
-
- Alex paused. What had he been about to say? It was so hard to think
- straight. Probably a side-effect of being in the heat of covert manoeuvres.
- Ah, yes, now he remembered...
-
- "Er, me still. Walsh. Er... sorry about what I said just now. It's just
- it's hard to do my job without the proper equipment. Sir. Anyway, sir, I'm
- behind enemy lines. I just overheard one of their Colonels talking to a
- Lieutenant about some sort of thingy they're going to do in the next hour or
- two. Something big. Involving Jeeps. Or at least, that's what they said,
- sir. I'm in sector E5, outside Freeman, Hardy and Willis. I'm going to
- carry on advancing."
-
- He switched off Mr. Microphone, sat up, and carefully slid out of the
- ferns. He stood up in the corridor and brushed himself down, then started
- advancing towards the clump of cacti to the east. Suddenly he realized that
- the dirt would give away his hiding place if anybody passed by; he jogged
- back, and carefully brushed the dirt into a small pile behind a nearby
- rubbish bin. Finally satisfied, he padded softly towards the cacti once
- more.
-
- --------
-
- "I'm telling you, sir, the man's an idiot. We should never have sent him on
- such an important mission."
-
- General Grant put down the My First Sony, sighed, and stood up. His
- International Rescue uniform emphasized his slight paunch as he leaned over
- the desk towards Captain Anthony Chase. "He may not be an expert in the
- field, but my God Anthony, he can get a train set working in minutes. An
- ordinary person like you or me, we'd take hours just to lay the bloody
- track. Then we'd have trouble connecting up the transformer -- I remember
- one Christmas I got a Scalextric set. The damn cars kept going backwards.
- Eventually I had to ask my Dad. But Walsh, he'd get it working in no time.
- And none of that fooling around with those damn track cleaning erasers,
- either."
-
- "That's as maybe, sir, but I still don't think we should have sent him behind
- enemy lines. What if they capture him? He'll tell them everything."
-
- "Yes, but what does he know? Nothing. Except where we keep the replacement
- bulbs for the rally cars. But he'd never tell them that. Not unless they
- had a receipt."
-
- The General's Second in Command looked pensive. "What do you think the enemy
- are up to, sir? Walsh said something about Jeeps."
-
- "Yes... I don't like it. I wonder what they mean by Jeeps?" He ran a hand
- through his thinning blond hair and scratched his nose.
-
- "Perhaps they mean Dinky toys, sir."
-
- Grant considered this for a moment. "Don't be silly, Anthony. They couldn't
- possibly be talking about Dinky toys."
-
- "Why not?"
-
- "Because there..."
-
- "Sir?"
-
- Grant frowned. He looked up at Anthony. The young man suddenly looked
- inexplicably odd in his camouflage-coloured plastic overalls and Lone Ranger
- holsters. "It's a funny thing, but you know I was about to say that they
- don't make Dinky toys any more."
-
- "I don't understand, sir."
-
- "It's the damnedest thing, but I suddenly had this feeling, something about
- the company going bust. Does that make any sense to you?"
-
- Anthony considered the matter. "Not really, sir. I mean, everybody has
- Dinky toys, sir."
-
- "Do they, do they indeed..." Grant took a cigarette from his pocket and
- began to blow into it, sending small clouds of fine white smoke into the
- room. "Where are our Dinky toys, number two?"
-
- Anthony looked around at the shelves. There were Care Bears, Masters of the
- Universe action figures, WWF playsets, but no Dinky toys. "I think... I
- think I must have sent them away to the warehouse, sir. For safekeeping."
-
- "Good man. Excellent thinking. Keep at it and you'll be in for a
- promotion."
-
- "Thank you, sir."
-
- General Grant stubbed out the unlit cigarette, stood up, and began pacing
- around the office. "I'm worried, Ant. Suppose they mean... Tamiya
- buggies?"
-
- Anthony gasped.
-
- "Exactly. Pack a Tamiya Jeep with explosives and it'd be a deadly assault
- vehicle. And there's only one place where they could have got Tamiya kits."
-
- "Where's that, sir?"
-
- Grant paused, grabbed his Sooty and Sweep magic wand, and waved it for
- emphasis. "They must have seized Toys'R'Us."
-
- "But there's still one thing I don't understand, sir." Anthony glanced
- around, stepped closer to the General and whispered in his ear. "I gathered
- from our Top Secret Intelligence reports that Toys'R'Us were completely out
- of rechargeable batteries."
-
- Grant nodded, a worried look on his face. "You're right. You're absolutely
- right. Those bastards must be using Duracells. We're dealing with desperate
- men; they're obviously prepared to sacrifice irreplaceable resources in the
- attack. And desperate men fight to the very end."
-
- --------
-
- Field Marshal Sir James Clark cut a dashing figure in his World War I style
- trenchcoat. His khaki chinos were carefully pressed, but the effect was
- rather ruined by brown polo-neck jumper, which still had the adhesive label
- on the front saying 8.99.
-
- He marched briskly towards the front of the store; the guards saluted as he
- approached. He walked past them and through the doors, and began striding
- past the perfume counters.
-
- "Sir?"
-
- He halted and turned back. "What is it, Private Evans?" he snapped.
-
- Private Evans burst into tears. "Sorry, sir, it's just..."
-
- Clark softened. "Sorry, Tracy. I shouldn't have snapped at you like that.
- We've all been through a lot recently."
-
- "I know, Sir. It's just that I still can't get over what happened to
- Sandra."
-
- Clark patted her on the shoulder. Yes, Sandra. That had been their first
- indication that the situation was serious. Private Jones had been captured
- by enemy agents and tortured with a food processor for vital intelligence
- information. The staff had found her body in Soft Furnishings later that
- night. They had immediately started guarding the perimeter of the shop 24
- hours a day to prevent further raids.
-
- "There, there... Come on, Trace. Come with me to the Officers' Mess and I'll
- buy you cod and chips. Come on, stop crying. Your mascara's starting to
- run."
-
- "S-Sorry sir. I only wanted to ask you if you wanted to try our new
- camouflage range."
-
- "What's that?"
-
- Private Evans brightened up and snapped into her sales patter. "Well, sir,
- ordinary camouflage paint can leave your skin greasy and your pores
- clogged. But our new camouflage range includes Plenitude action liposomes,
- to help protect and enhance your skin. As well as a wide range of facial
- treatments in black, grey, green and brown, we also have a selection of
- camouflage eye shadow and eyeliners."
-
- "Well, er..."
-
- "Here, Sir, let me give you a demonstration." She rubbed in a little
- foundation to one of the Field Marshal's cheeks, then gently brushed more
- colour over the top. "Note how the greens and browns blend together to
- emphasize your cheekbones and bring out your natural skin tone."
-
- Clark looked in the mirror. A slightly chubby face stared back at him
- through docile-looking brown eyes. Was that a grey hair amongst the black?
- Wouldn't do to let the troops see their officers with grey hairs. It would
- be bad for morale. Still, the makeup did make him look much younger and more
- handsome.
-
- "It's very good, Tra... er, Private Evans. Come on, I'll buy you lunch."
-
- They made their way up the escalator and through kitchenware to the
- restaurant. Corporal Bell was already there, drinking coffee.
-
- "Morning, sir."
-
- "Morning, Corporal. Any news?"
-
- Bell considered. "Well, sir, General Jenkins is still away with his
- negotiating team, trying to forge an alliance with Dixons. We need their
- radio equipment, and they need our food, clothing and fashion accessories."
-
- "Quite. Any more casualties?"
-
- "One, Sir. Harris. He was out on a secret intelligence mission, trying to
- gather information about troop movements near Radio Rentals. I'm afraid the
- InterSport Texas Homecare Republic have the area sewn up tight. He didn't
- stand a chance."
-
- --------
-
- Karen peered out through a pair of 2x50 folding binoculars she had stolen
- from the camera shop. Outside, there were a few consumers wandering
- uncertainly down the side streets. Crazy fools -- didn't they know there
- was a war on?
-
- She sighed. Border patrol was the most boring duty of the lot. This
- particular restaurant was only accessible via the glass lift, or by going
- outside the shopping centre and climbing the stairs, so there was little
- chance of any action. Most of the troops in the shops below seemed to have
- forgotten about it entirely; they were too busy trying to cope with the
- shifting patterns of allegiances.
-
- She put down the binoculars and glanced down. From up here, she could watch
- their movements in safety through the tinted glass. That guy from the toy
- shop was crouching behind one of the potted plants, peering into C&A. He'd
- have to be careful, or they'd spot him.
-
- She looked back outside. There was some sort of movement in one of the
- streets; a man was approaching, carrying a placard of some sort. Karen
- grabbed the binoculars again for a closer look.
-
- It was a policeman. He was advancing slowly towards the main entrance. The
- notice he was carrying said:
-
- THERE IS NO WAR
- PLEASE COME OUT
- WE WILL NOT HARM YOU
-
- Karen sighed and picked up the rifle she had obtained from the outdoor sports
- shop. What kind of fools did he take them for? Surrender? Did he think
- they were mad?
-
-
- mathew
-