Read Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang Online
Authors: Emma Thompson
‘Certainly not!’ said Mrs Green. ‘He’s a fully fledgling professional, leave it to him.’
‘Megsie, help me with these, will you?’ said Phil, helplessly trying to cuff himself up.
Now that Mr Spolding was dealing with the bomb, everyone had time to remember what a terrible thing Phil had done. They all turned and stared at him. He quailed.
‘You don’t deserve any help, you completely
wicked
person!’ said Megsie.
‘Please!’ said Phil. ‘I’m begging you!’
‘Allow me,’ said Mrs Green, in an icy voice that none of her children had ever heard before. She went over, led Phil to the oven range and cuffed him to the iron bar above, where the saucepans hung.
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‘Thank you, Isabel,’ said Phil, in pathetic tones.
Just then, Mr Spolding’s voice was heard through the loudhailer and everyone turned away from Phil and back to the window.
Mr Spolding had put a ladder up against the side of the bomb and was on top of it, shouting towards the house. ‘I am about to disarm the device,’ he intoned. ‘If I succeed there will be no further peril or untimely demise –’
He lowered the loudhailer for a moment, but lifted it again as though struck by a new thought.
‘And if I don’t succeed,’ he shouted, sounding a little less confident, ‘there will be lots of peril and we’ll all die, especially me, cos I’m closest.’
Then he lowered the hailer again and lifted the pamphlet, wobbled slightly, wobbled a bit more, gave a tiny moan and fell backwards off the ladder and into the barley. There was a dead silence.
‘He fell over,’ said Vincent, in case no one else had noticed.
‘I think he may have fainted,’ said Mrs Green.
‘That’s useful,’ said Cyril.
‘Who’s going to defuse it now?’ said Norman.
‘I bet Megsie could!’ said Celia.
‘Oh, don’t be ridiculous!’ said Mrs Green, but found herself shouted down by five children all crying, ‘Yes! Yes! Megsie can do it! Let her try!’
Mrs Green was adamant, but finally Norman caught her arm and said, ‘Mum – listen, if that thing goes off, the crop will be destroyed and it will all have been for nothing!’
‘Oh, please let me try!’ begged Megsie.
‘There’s an official pamphlet!’ said Cyril. ‘What could go wrong?’
All the children started to march off in a determined pack.
‘All of you, come
back
here, right now!’ shouted Mrs Green, following them.
‘Help me to stop them, Nanny McPhee!’ she cried as she ran out of the door.
‘I doubt that will be possible,’ said Nanny McPhee, allowing herself just the slightest hint of a smile before she too left the kitchen.
Phil was left alone. He examined the bar he was cuffed to. It was good and strong. Even if the hit-women came, they wouldn’t be able to take him away, he reckoned. He was as safe here as anywhere and a lot safer than the rest of the family, who were probably going to get blown up. Which meant that the farm would be available after all. He brightened slightly. Things were looking up.
In the field, Mrs Green had failed to stop the children from taking action and had gone with them to see if Mr Spolding was all right after his fall. While she and Vincent fanned him, Megsie issued orders:
‘Boys, put that ladder back up! Celia, you’ve got the best diction and the loudest voice, you read out the instructions.’
Megsie shimmied up the ladder like a monkey and called out, ‘Right, I’m in position. Go!’
‘Step One,’ said Celia, in her clearest tones. ‘Open the vent situated by the tail fin with a screwdriver.’
Megsie looked at the bomb – there was the vent, right in front of her. She whipped out a screwdriver and tried it but it was too small, so she got the next size up, which fitted perfectly. Taking a deep breath, she attacked the screws, extracting each one quickly and efficiently.
‘I’m taking the vent off NOW!’ she called out to the others, who were all at the base of the ladder watching her with tense anxiety.
Megsie pulled hard, and with a screech of metal that made her wince she pulled off the vent and flung it away from her into the barley, where it landed with a quiet thud.
‘Vent’s off!’ cried Megsie. ‘What’s next!’
‘Step Two,’ said Celia. ‘Cut the blue wire.’
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Megsie looked into the bomb’s innards. She’d been quite calm until now, but the sight that met her eyes gave her a real shock. The bomb was a mess of cables and wires and nuts and bolts that looked as though someone had just pushed them all in without caring where anything went.
‘No wonder the blinking thing doesn’t work,’ she muttered to herself, gingerly using the screwdriver to push aside the mess and find the blue wire. Talking to herself calmed her down slightly and then she saw the wire she wanted nestling next to some others which were different colours. She took out a pair of wire-cutters from her tool apron. At the bottom of the ladder, Norman was panting with tension.
‘Have you done it?’ he said.
‘No! These are too small!’ cried Megsie, waving the cutters at the others. ‘Has anyone got a penknife or something?’
Everyone searched their pockets frantically until Celia gave a shout. ‘Here!’ She handed up a pair of nail scissors she’d found in her nail kit.
‘Try these!’
‘Perfect!’ said Megsie gratefully.
With great care, she reached into the bomb again and
SNIP
, cut the blue wire.
‘Done!’ she announced.
Everyone heaved a sigh of relief. Nothing bad had happened. Everything was going according to plan.
‘Step Three!’ said Celia. ‘Cut the
red
wire.’
Megsie searched for the red wire and finally saw it – deeper down than the blue; she was going to have to reach her body further over the lip of the bomb than felt quite safe. But she was a brave and determined person, so she pulled herself up and stretched inwards.
‘It’s like being a lion-tamer,’ she said to herself. ‘I’m putting my head into the lion’s mouth.’
Below her, things were getting even tenser.
‘What’s taking so long?’ shouted Norman.
‘Can you see it?’ shouted Celia.
‘Have you done it?’ shouted Cyril.
But Megsie was so far inside the bomb she couldn’t hear them. All they could see were her legs waving in the air. Mrs Green was biting her fist to keep herself from screaming. She was desperate to get everyone away but she knew that they couldn’t move Mr Spolding, who was still out cold, and she couldn’t think of any way she could move the children, except by carrying them bodily away one by one, which would never work. The suspense rose. Everyone stopped breathing.
‘Isn’t it EXCITING!!!’ said a very loud voice. They all jumped ten feet in the air and whirled round to find Mrs Docherty standing there, gazing at the bomb with huge enthusiasm.
‘Shh!’ they all said. ‘Megsie’s trying to defuse it!’
‘Ooooh!’ said Mrs Docherty, thrilled, and going to stand beside Mrs Green and Mr Spolding.
‘Hello, Algernon,’ she said. ‘You’re not dead, are you?’
Mrs Green whispered an explanation as Megsie’s head finally re-emerged from the bomb and she waved the scissors aloft and cried, ‘Done! What’s Step Four?’
Then, very suddenly, the bomb gave a lurch. Megsie shrieked with alarm.
‘Is that supposed to happen?’ quavered Mrs Green, running to look over Celia’s shoulder at the pamphlet.
Unseen by all, a little red light on the side of the bomb started to flash. It was in a row of ten . . .
Back in the kitchen, Phil had tried, unsuccessfully, to get comfortable and was now in a very bad mood. He closed his eyes and tried to doze off, but then heard the kitchen door opening.
‘At last!’ he said grumpily. ‘Could someone take these things off –’
He looked over, and there were Miss Topsey and Miss Turvey, both attired in very smart nurses’ uniforms and pushing a cloth-covered trolley before them.
‘Oo-oo!’ they sang, as all the blood drained from Phil’s face into his toes.
‘We thought we’d bring the sign ourselves!’ said Miss Topsey, pushing the trolley up towards Phil.
‘But – I thought that was the sign! The bomb!’ said Phil, his eyes bulging.
‘That?’ said Miss Turvey. ‘Oh no. That’s just a silly old UXB. That needn’t concern you Phil, no.’
‘You can’t do anything to me!’ Phil yelled. ‘I’m in a fishy custard and cuffs!’
‘That’s useful,’ said Miss Topsey.
‘We won’t have to tie you down,’ said Miss Turvey. ‘We’ve got such good news for you, Phil!’
‘We’re not going to squash you with farm machinery after all!’
Phil experienced a moment’s wild relief. He sagged against the cooker and then stood up again sharpish because it was hot.
‘Oh?’ he said weakly. ‘That’s – that’s good. Why’s that, then?’
‘Because Mrs Big decided squashing wasn’t good enough for you,’ said Miss Topsey.
‘It lacked finesse,’ said Miss Turvey.
‘Too messy,’ explained Miss Topsey, in case Phil didn’t know what finesse meant, which he didn’t.
‘So – what she wants is . . .’ said Miss Turvey, looking terribly excited.
‘She wants us to . . .’ said Miss Topsey, looking equally thrilled.
‘She wants us to STUFF YOU!!!’ they chorused joyfully.
Phil blinked. He couldn’t quite take it in. ‘What?’ he said.
‘She wants us to stuff you and put you in the entrance to the London casino! As a warning to others!’ cried Miss Topsey.
‘What an honour, Phil!’ breathed Miss Turvey, looking at Phil as though she quite envied him.
Phil thought he was going to be sick. ‘You can’t do that!’ he said, knowing full well that they could and would.
‘Oh, don’t you worry, Phil,’ said Miss Topsey.
‘Miss Turvey’s a professional!’
Here, Miss Turvey looked down bashfully and opened her handbag. ‘Here’s an early example of my work,’ she said shyly, pulling out a large owl, expertly stuffed and mounted on a shiny brass pedestal.
Miss Topsey opened her bag and pulled something else out. ‘And here’s how you’ll look!’ she said, putting a model figure, also mounted on a brass pedestal, next to the owl. The figure looked exactly like Phil, down to the stripes on his tie and the look of terror on his face.
Both ladies then flung aside the cloth on the trolley to reveal an array of extremely upsetting surgical instruments, which glinted up at Phil evilly. Miss Topsey picked up the oddest of them. It was a large ladle, such as you might use for serving soup.
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