Johnny and the Dead Read online




  Contents

  Cover

  About the Book

  Title Page

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Author’s Note

  Read On

  About the Author

  Also by Terry Pratchett

  Copyright

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  Sell the cemetery?

  Over their dead bodies . . .

  Not many people can see the dead (not many would want to). Twelve-year-old Johnny Maxwell can. And he’s got bad news for them: the council want to sell the cemetery as a building site. But the dead aren’t going to take it lying down … especially since it’s Halloween tomorrow.

  Besides, they’re beginning to find that life is a lot more fun than it was when they were … well … alive. Particularly if they break a few rules …

  TERRY

  PRATCHETT

  A JOHNNY MAXWELL Story

  JOHNNY

  AND THE

  DEAD

  Chapter 1

  Johnny never knew for certain why he started seeing the dead.

  The Alderman said it was probably because he was too lazy not to.

  Most people’s minds don’t let them see things that might upset them, he said. The Alderman said he should know if anyone did, because he’d spent his whole life (1822–1906) not seeing things.

  Wobbler Johnson, who was technically Johnny’s best friend, said it was because he was mental.

  But Yo-less, who read medical books, said it was probably because he couldn’t focus his mind like normal people. Normal people just ignored almost everything that was going on around them, so that they could concentrate on important things like, well, getting up, going to the lavatory and getting on with their lives. Whereas Johnny just opened his eyes in the morning and the whole universe hit him in the face.

  Wobbler said this sounded like ‘mental’ to him.

  Whatever it was called, what it meant was this. Johnny saw things other people didn’t.

  Like the dead people hanging around in the cemetery.

  The Alderman – at least, the old Alderman – was a bit snobby about most of the rest of the dead, even about Mr Vicenti, who had a huge black marble grave with angels and a photograph of Mr Vicenti (1897-1958) looking not at all dead behind a little window. The Alderman said Mr Vicenti had been a Capo de Monte in the Mafia. Mr Vicenti told Johnny that, on the contrary, he had spent his entire life being a wholesale novelty salesman, amateur escapologist and children’s entertainer, which in a number of important respects was as exactly like not being in the Mafia as it was possible to get.

  But all this was later. After he’d got to know the dead a lot better. After the raising of the ghost of the Ford Capri.

  *

  Johnny really discovered the cemetery after he’d started living at Grandad’s. This was Phase Three of Trying Times, after the shouting, which had been bad, and the Being Sensible About Things (which had been worse; people are better at shouting). Now his dad was getting a new job somewhere on the other side of the country. There was a vague feeling that it might all work out, now that people had stopped trying to be sensible. On the whole, he tried not to think about it.

  He’d started using the path along the canal instead of going home on the bus, and found that if you climbed over the place where the wall had fallen down, and then went around behind the crematorium, you could cut off half the journey.

  The graves went right up to the canal’s edge.

  It was one of those old cemeteries you got owls and foxes in and sometimes, in the Sunday papers, people going on about Our Victorian Heritage, although they didn’t go on about this one because it was the wrong kind of heritage, being too far from London.

  Wobbler said it was spooky and sometimes went home the long way, but Johnny was disappointed that it wasn’t spookier. Once you sort of put out of your mind what it was – once you forgot about all the skeletons underground, grinning away in the dark – it was quite friendly. Birds sang. All the traffic sounded a long way off. It was peaceful.

  He’d had to check a few things, though. Some of the older graves had big stone boxes on top, and in the wilder parts these had cracked and even fallen open. He’d had a look inside, just in case.

  It had been sort of disappointing to find nothing there.

  And then there were the mausoleums. These were much bigger and had doors in, like little houses. They looked a bit like allotment sheds with extra angels. The angels were generally more lifelike than you’d expect, especially one near the entrance who looked as though he’d just remembered that he should have gone to the toilet before he left heaven.

  The two boys walked through the cemetery now, kicking up the drifts of fallen leaves.

  ‘It’s Halloween next week,’ said Wobbler. ‘I’m having a disco. You have to come as something horrible. Don’t bother to find a disguise.’

  ‘Thanks,’ said Johnny.

  ‘You notice how there’s a lot more Halloween stuff in the shops these days?’ said Wobbler.

  ‘It’s because of Bonfire Night,’ said Johnny. ‘Too many people were blowing themselves up with fireworks, so they invented Halloween, where you just wear masks and stuff.’

  ‘Mrs Nugent says all that sort of thing is tampering with the occult,’ said Wobbler. Mrs Nugent was the Johnsons’ next door neighbour, and known to be unreasonable on subjects like Madonna played at full volume at 3 a.m.

  ‘Probably it is,’ said Johnny.

  ‘She says witches are abroad on Halloween,’ said Wobbler.

  ‘What?’ Johnny’s forehead wrinkled. ‘Like . . . Marjorca and places?’

  ‘Suppose so,’ said Wobbler.

  ‘Makes . . . sense, I suppose. They probably get special out-of-season bargains, being old ladies,’ said Johnny. ‘My aunt can go anywhere on the buses for almost nothing and she’s not even a witch.’

  ‘Don’t see why Mrs Nugent is worried, then,’ said Wobbler. ‘It ort to be a lot safer round here, with all the witches on holiday.’

  They passed a very ornate mausoleum, which even had little stained-glass windows. It was hard to imagine who’d want to see in, but then, it was even harder to imagine who’d want to look out.

  ‘Shouldn’t like to be on the same plane as ‘em,’ said Wobbler, who’d been thinking hard. ‘Just think, p’raps you can only afford to go on holiday in the autumn, and you get on the plane, and there’s all these old witches going abroad.’

  ‘Singing “Here we go, here we go, here we go”?’ said Johnny.

  ‘And “Viva a spanner”?’

  ‘But I bet you’d get really good service in the hotel,’ said Johnny.

  ‘Yeah.’

  ‘Funny, really,’ said Johnny.

  ‘What?’

  ‘I saw a thing in a book once,’ said Johnny, ‘about these people in Mexico or somewhere, where they all go down to the cemetery for a big fiesta at Halloween every year. Like, they don’t see why people should be left out of things just because they’re dead.’

  ‘Yuk. A picnic? In the actual cemetery?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Reckon you’d get green glowing hands pushing up through the earth and nicking the sarnies?’

  ‘Don’t think so. Anyway . . . they don’t eat sarnies in Mexico. They eat tort . . . something.’

  ‘Tortoises.’

  ‘Yeah?’

  ‘I bet,’ said Wobbler, looking around, ‘I bet . . . I bet you wouldn’t dare knock on one of t
hose doors. I bet you’d hear dead people lurchin’ about inside.’

  ‘Why do they lurch?’

  Wobbler thought about this.

  ‘They always lurch,’ he said. ‘Dunno why. I’ve seen them in videos. And they can push their way through walls.’

  ‘Why?’ said Johnny.

  ‘Why what?’

  ‘Why push their way through walls? I mean . . . living people can’t do that. Why should dead people do it?’

  Wobbler’s mother was very easy-going in the matter of videos. According to him, he was allowed to watch ones which even people aged a hundred had to watch with their parents.

  ‘Don’t know,’ he said. ‘They’re usually very angry about something.’

  ‘Being dead, you mean?’

  ‘Probably,’ said Wobbler. ‘It can’t be much of a life.’

  Johnny thought about this that evening, after meeting the Alderman. The only dead people he had known had been Mr Page, who’d died in hospital of something, and his great-grandmother, who’d been ninety-six and had just generally died. Neither of them had been particularly angry people. His great-grandmother had been a bit confused about things, but never angry. He’d visited her in Sunshine Acres, where she watched a lot of television and waited for the next meal to turn up. And Mr Page had walked around quietly, the only man in the street still at home in the middle of the day.

  They didn’t seem the sort of people who would get up after being dead just to dance with Michael Jackson. And the only thing his great-grandmother would have pushed her way through walls for would be a television that she could watch without having to fight fifteen other old ladies for the remote control.

  It seemed to Johnny that a lot of people were getting things all wrong. He said this to Wobbler. Wobbler disagreed.

  ‘lt’s prob’ly all different from a dead point of view,’ he said.

  Now they were walking along West Avenue. The cemetery was laid out like a town, with streets. They weren’t named very originally – North Drive and South Walk joined West Avenue, for example, at a little gravelled area with seats in. A kind of city centre. But the silence of the big Victorian mausoleums made the place look as though it was having the longest early-closing day in the world.

  ‘My dad says this is all going to be built on,’ said Wobbler. ‘He said the Council sold it to some big company for fivepence because it was costing so much to keep it going.’

  ‘What, all of it?’ said Johnny.

  ‘That’s what he said,’ said Wobbler. Even he looked a bit uncertain. ‘He said it was a scandal.’

  ‘Even the bit with the poplar trees?’

  ‘All of it,’ said Wobbler. ‘It’s going to be offices or something.’

  Johnny looked at the cemetery. It was the only open space for miles.

  ‘I’d have given them at least a pound,’ he said.

  ‘Yes, but you wouldn’t have been able to build things on it,’ said Wobbler. ‘That’s the important thing.’

  ‘I wouldn’t want to build anything on it. I’d have given them a pound just to leave it as it is.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Wobbler, the voice of reason, ‘but people have got to work somewhere. We Need Jobs.’

  ‘I bet the people here won’t be very happy about it,’ said Johnny. ‘If they knew.’

  ‘I think they get moved somewhere else,’ said Wobbler. ‘It’s got to be something like that. Otherwise you’d never dare dig your garden.’

  Johnny looked up at the nearest tomb. It was one of the ones that looked like a shed built of marble. Bronze lettering over the door said:

  ALDERMAN THOMAS BOWLER

  1822-1906

  Pro Bono Publico

  There was a stone carving of – presumably – the Alderman himself, looking seriously into the distance as if he, too, was wondering what Pro Bono Publico meant.

  ‘I bet he’d be pretty angry,’ said Johnny.

  He hesitated for a moment, and then walked up the couple of broken steps to the metal door, and knocked on it. He never did know why he’d done that.

  ‘Here, you mustn’t!’ hissed Wobbler. ‘Supposing he comes lurchin’ out! Anyway,’ he said, lowering his voice a bit, ‘it’s wrong to try to talk to the dead. It can lead to satanic practices, it said on television.’

  ‘Don’t see why,’ said Johnny.

  He knocked again.

  And the door opened.

  Alderman Thomas Bowler blinked in the sunlight, and then glared at Johnny.

  ‘Yes?’ he said.

  Johnny turned and ran for it.

  Wobbler caught him up halfway along North Drive. Wobbler wasn’t normally the athletic type, and his speed would have surprised quite a lot of people who knew him.

  ‘What happened? What happened?’ he panted.

  ‘Didn’t you see?’ said Johnny.

  ‘I didn’t see anything!’

  ‘The door opened!’

  ‘It never!’

  ‘It did!’

  Wobbler slowed down.

  ‘No, it didn’t,’ he muttered. ‘No one of ‘em can open. I’ve looked at ’em. They’ve all got padlocks on.’

  ‘To keep people out or keep people in?’ said Johnny.

  A look of panic crossed Wobbler’s face. Since he had a big face, this took some time. He started to run again.

  ‘You’re just trying to wind me up!’ he yelled. ‘I’m not going to hang around practising being satanic! I’m going home!’

  He turned the corner into East Way and sprinted towards the main gate.

  Johnny slowed down.

  He thought: padlocks.

  It was true, actually. He’d noticed it in the past.

  All the mausoleums had locks on them, to stop vandals getting in.

  And yet . . . and yet . . .

  If he shut his eyes he could see Alderman Thomas Bowler. Not one of the lurchin’ dead from out of Wobbler’s videos, but a huge fat man in a fur-trimmed robe and a gold chain and a hat with corners on.

  He stopped running and then, slowly, walked back the way he had come.

  There was a padlock on the door of the Alderman’s tomb. It had a rusty look.

  It was the talking to Wobbler that did it, Johnny decided. It had given him silly ideas.

  He knocked again, anyway.

  ‘Yes?’ said Alderman Thomas Bowler.

  ‘Er . . . hah . . . sorry . . .’

  ‘What do you want?’

  ‘Are you dead?’

  The Alderman raised his eyes to the bronze letters over the door.

  ‘See what it says up there?’ he said.

  ‘Er . . .’

  ‘Nineteen hundred and six, it says. It was a very good funeral, I understand. I didn’t attend, myself.’ The Alderman gave this some thought. ‘Rather, I did, but not in any position where I could observe events. I believe the vicar gave a very moving sermon. What was it you were wanting?’

  ‘Er . . .’ Johnny looked around desperately. ‘What . . . er . . . what does Pro Bono Publico mean?’

  ‘For the Public Good,’ said the Alderman.

  ‘Oh. Well . . . thank you.’ Johnny backed away. ‘Thank you very much.’

  ‘Was that all?’

  ‘Er . . . yes.’

  The Alderman nodded sadly. ‘I didn’t think it’d be anything important,’ he said. ‘I haven’t had a visitor since nineteen twenty-three. And then they’d got the name wrong. They weren’t even relatives. And they were American. Oh, well. Goodbye, then.’

  Johnny hesitated. I could turn around now, he thought, and go home.

  And if I turn around, I’ll never find out what happens next. I’ll go away and I‘ll never know why it happened now and what would have happened next. I’ll go away and grow up and get a job and get married and have children and become a grandad and retire and take up bowls and go into Sunshine Acres and watch daytime television until I die, and I’ll never know.

  And he thought: perhaps I did. Perhaps that all happened and the
n, just when I was dying, some kind of angel turned up and said would you like a wish? And I said, yes, I’d like to know what would have happened if I hadn’t run away, and the angel said, OK, you can go back. And here I am, back again. I can’t let myself down.

  The world waited.

  Johnny took a step forward.

  ‘You’re dead, right?’ he said slowly.

  ‘Oh, yes. It’s one of those things one is pretty certain about.’

  ‘You don’t look dead. I mean, I thought . . . you know . . . coffins and things . . .’

  ‘Oh, there’s all that,’ said the Alderman, airily, ‘and then there’s this, too.’

  ‘You’re a ghost?’ Johnny was rather relieved. He could come to terms with a ghost.

  ‘I should hope I’ve got more pride than that,’ said the Alderman.

  ‘My friend Wobbler’ll be really amazed to meet you,’ said Johnny. A thought crossed his mind. ‘You’re no good at dancing, are you?’ he said.

  ‘I used to be able to waltz quite well,’ said the Alderman.

  ‘I meant . . . sort of . . . like this,’ said Johnny. He gave the best impression he could remember of Michael Jackson dancing. ‘Sort of with your feet,’ he said apologetically.

  ‘That looks grand,’ said Alderman Tom Bowler.

  ‘Yes, and you have to have a glittery glove on one hand—’

  ‘That’s important, is it?’

  ‘Yes, and you have to say “Ow!”’

  ‘I should think anyone would, dancing like that,’ said the Alderman.

  ‘No, I mean like “Oooowwwwwwweeeeeah!”, with . . .’

  Johnny stopped. He realized that he was getting a bit carried away.

  ‘But, look,’ he said, stopping at the end of a groove in the gravel. ‘I don’t see how you can be dead and walking and talking at the same time . . .’

  ‘That’s probably all because of relativity,’ said the Alderman. He moonwalked stiffly across the path. ‘Like this, was it? Ouch!’

  ‘A bit,’ said Johnny, kindly. ‘Um. What do you mean about relativity?’

  ‘Einstein explains all that quite well,’ said the Alderman.

  ‘What, Albert Einstein?’ said Johnny.

 

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