job had been done well.
Then she collapsed the strange theodolite, strapped it onto the back of a sit-up-and-beg black bicycle leaning against the hedge, made sure The Book was in the basket, and wheeled everything out to the misty lane.
It was a very ancient bike, with a frame apparently made of drainpipes. It had been built long before the invention of the three-speed gear, and possibly only just after the invention of the wheel.
But it was nearly all downhill to the village. Hair streaming in the wind, cloak ballooning behind her like a sheet anchor, she let the two-wheeled juggernaut accelerate ponderously through the warm air. At least there wasnât any traffic at this time of night.
THE BENTLEYâS ENGINE went pink, pink as it cooled. Crowleyâs temper, on the other hand, was heating up.
âYou said you saw it signposted,â he said.
âWell, we flashed by so quickly. Anyway, I thought youâd been here before.â
âEleven years ago!â
Crowley hurled the map onto the back seat and started the engine again.
âPerhaps we should ask someone,â said Aziraphale.
âOh, yes,â said Crowley. âWeâll stop and ask the first person we see walking along aâa track in the middle of the night, shall we?â
He jerked the car into gear and roared out into the beech-hung lane.
âThereâs something odd about this area,â said Aziraphale. âCanât you feel it?â
âWhat?â
âSlow down a moment.â
The Bentley slowed again.
âOdd,â muttered the angel, âI keep getting these flashes of, of ⦠â
He raised his hands to his temples.
âWhat? What?â said Crowley.
Aziraphale stared at him.
âLove,â he said. âSomeone really loves this place.â
âPardon?â
âThere seems to be this great sense of love. I canât put it any better than that. Especially not to you .â
âDo you mean likeââ Crowley began.
There was a whirr, a scream, and a clunk. The car stopped.
Aziraphale blinked, lowered his hands, and gingerly opened the door.
âYouâve hit someone,â he said.
âNo I havenât,â said Crowley. âSomeoneâs hit me.â
They got out. Behind the Bentley a bicycle lay in the road, its front wheel bent into a creditable Mobius shape, its back wheel clicking ominously to a standstill.
âLet there be light,â said Aziraphale. A pale blue glow filled the lane.
From the ditch beside them someone said, âHow the hell did you do that?â
The light vanished.
âDo what?â said Aziraphale guiltily.
âUh.â Now the voice sounded muzzy. âI think I hit my head on something ⦠â
Crowley glared at a long metallic streak on the Bentleyâs glossy paintwork and a dimple in the bumper. The dimple popped back into shape. The paint healed.
âUp you get, young lady,â said the angel, hauling Anathema out of the bracken. âNo bones broken.â It was a statement, not a hope; there had been a minor fracture, but Aziraphale couldnât resist an opportunity to do good.
âYou didnât have any lights,â she began.
âNor did you,â said Crowley guiltily. âFairâs fair.â
âDoing a spot of astronomy, were we?â said Aziraphale, setting the bike upright. Various things clattered out of its front basket. He pointed to the battered theodolite.
âNo,â said Anathema, âI mean, yes. And look what youâve done to poor old Phaeton.â
âIâm sorry?â said Aziraphale.
âMy bicycle. Itâs bent all toââ
âAmazingly resilient, these old machines,â said the angel brightly, handing it to her. The front wheel gleamed in the moonlight, as perfectly round as one of the Circles of Hell.
She stared at it.
âWell, since thatâs all sorted out,â said Crowley,
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