Part 29 (1/2)

The word came to the travellers on the one o'clock news. It came from the BBC.

The word was that twenty-three thousand travellers, disappointed at being turned away from their festival at Gunnersbury Park, were now heading for Star Hill.

And, in approximately the time it takes to turn a key in an ignition, or at least get a b.u.mp-start going, they were.

Magic.

'Hang about,' called John Omally. 'What's all the rush? Come back.'

'One two. One two,' went Anna Gotting through one million watts of power.

's.h.i.+va's sheep!' Mickey Minns covered his ears. 'I think we can give that the thumbs up. Would you look at all those buses.

They rose up the hill from the place where the other buses (the ones with the numbers on the fronts and the regular places to go) turn around. The first was a technicolor dream of a thing. b.o.l.l.o.c.ks sat at the wheel.

'This is some nice hill,' he said to Tuppe.

'We like it.'

'What's up with Cornelius? He hasn't said a word since the two of you got back from breakfast.'

'He had a spot of bad news,' Tuppe whispered. 'I think there may well be a great deal of unpleasantness when he meets up with Arthur Kobold.'

Men in official Gandhi's Hairdryer World Tour T-s.h.i.+rts waved the happy bus to a halt and put up their thumbs. b.o.l.l.o.c.ks switched off the engine, opened the roof hatch and put up a ladder. 'You'll see the show a whole lot better from up here, Tuppe,' he said.

'Brilliant.' Tuppe scaled the ladder, climbed out on to the roof and took it all in. And there was a lot to be took.

Upon the crest of the hill, upon the very spot where the concrete memorial plinth of the Reverend Kemp had until so recently stood, was a ma.s.sive erection. And what a ma.s.sive erection it was.

A mighty stage rose above the tree line. Flanked by two Herculean hairdryers, fifty feet in height and housing speaker systems of sufficient power to stagger the senses of that legendary stable-swabber himself.

Moored between these t.i.tanic structures and bob-bing gently in the breeze (which came as ever from the east), was a s.h.i.+ning dirigible, cunningly fas.h.i.+oned to resemble the head of a not-altogether-unknown Mahatma. Gla.s.ses, big grin, the lot.

And, lest some confusion still remained in the minds of the less mentally alert regarding the name of the band scheduled to. play, huge letters of the HOLLYWOOD sign variety lined the back of the stage.

They spelled out the words G AND HIS HAIRDRYER.

No doubt the road crew would sort that out later.

Tuppe was very much impressed.

Cornelius wasn't. His hair appeared through the roof hatch, followed by his head. He took one look up the hill, went, 'Bleugh,' and vanished back into the bus, taking his hair with him.

Tuppe remained impressed. A ma.s.sive erection never left a bad taste in his mouth.

And Tuppe continued with his looking. He spied out the big generator trucks, the lighting gantries with their laser flares and Super Troupers, the control box, where all the technical hocus-pocus went on, the small housing estate of luxuriously appointed artistes' caravans. And he wondered whether the Gandhis were already inside these, gargling champagne, munching steak sandwiches, and doing rude things with groupies. And in the latter part of this wondering, Tuppe spied out a golden window of s.e.xualopportunity. And so he s.h.i.+nned back down the ladder to see if he could spy out Mr Bone.

Mickey Minns sat on the edge of the great pink stage, sharing a joint with Anna Gotting. Mickey was dreaming about Woodstock.

He sighed in a lungful of Ganja smoke and said, 'Did I ever tell you about the time I ...

'Yes,' replied Anna, recognizing that far-away look. 'But you can tell me again, if you want to.'

The sun shone on down and the trucks and buses kept on coming. The greensward became black with them. They paved it over.

And when the common ground was all full up, the men in the official Gandhi's Hairdryer World Tour T-s.h.i.+rts began waving them on to the golf course.

It was now three in the afternoon. No, stuff that. It was now six in the evening. No, stuff that also. It was now nine o'clock at night.

And The Sonic Energy Authority came on stage. Lasers criss-crossed the sky. Super Troupers did their thing and the band launched into their first number.

Now, if you've never seen SEA, and n.o.body really has, getting the measure of their music can be a tricky business.

The lead singer, Cardinal c.o.x, when asked by the presenter of a TV arts programme to describe it, said, 'Basically, like, the music is diatonic. Based upon any scale of five tones and two semitones produced by playing the white keys of a keyboard instrument, especially the natural major and minor scales, as these form the basis of the key system in most of Western music, like. But, naturally, this can be seen as a metaphor. Whilst the five tones represent man's five senses, the two semitones represent the dualistic proposition that reality consists of just the two basic principles, mind and matter. Like.'

'Pretentious prat,' muttered the presenter. 'Well, Let's take a break there, and coming up in part two...'

The Sonic Energy Authority did play pretty loud though. Because as we all know, 'If it's too loud, you're too old.'

Their first power chord, a diminished A7th with a flattened ninth on the F string, which was largely symbolic of the euhemerist theory that the G.o.ds arose out of the deification of historical heroes, was an absolute stonker.

It blew Tuppe straight off the bus roof.

'Look out below,' he called as he tumbled through the hatch. Bone caught him.

'Mr Bone,' said Tuppe. 'I gave up looking for you. What say we look up your friend the drummer and see if he might introduce us to his friends the groupies?'

'Good idea.' Bone hefted Tuppe on to his shoulders and struck out for the good-time girls. 'Let's rock 'n' roll,' he said.

'h.e.l.lo,' called the Cardinal, between philosophical key-s.h.i.+fts. 'Is there anybody out there, or what?'

'Cheer', 'Hoorah' and 'Yeaaahhhhhhr went the crowd.

'Then let us Rock 'n' Roll!' The Cardinal, a striking figure in latex drainpipes and a chain-mail tank top, and with slightly less hair than Cornelius Murphy (but not much), gave his guitar a piece of his mind.

'This one's called ”Hi Ho Silver Lining”,' he bawled.

'Let's go, Tuppe,' said Cornelius. 'Tuppe? Where are you?'

'What is all that b.l.o.o.d.y racket?' cried the king.

'I don't know.' Arthur Kobold crossed his heart. 'It's not my doing.'

'Well it's going on right over my head.' The king pointed towards the high fan vaulting of the great hall. 'And it shouldn't be doing that, should it?'

'No, sire, it shouldn't.''Then kindly go up and see what it is, Arthur. And stop it, right away. I run this planet and I will not have a lot of human rubbish making a racket over my regal head. Put a stop to it. Right now.'

'As if I didn't have anything else to do.'