If
you start any sentence with, In my day, it automatically
qualifies you as a fuddy-duddy. The truth is, in my day the world was a whole
hell of a lot more exciting. Twelve-year olds today spend their free time
crushing aliens on x-box or texting. When I was twelve, I built a bomb to blow
up the widow Flannigan’s wall.
It
all started on a summer’s morning when I went to visit my friend Johnny. Johnny
lived with his gran, a few minutes away from my house. Johnny’s grans house was
a huge old place with loads of bedrooms, sitting rooms, and parlours. It was
always cold, even in the summer time and it smelled like an old man’s coat. The
house had once been a bursting full to the seams with people but they had long
ago vanished to the four corners of the world.
We
explored the house from top to bottom, but it was the attic that was most
fascinating. The attic ran the full length of the house and you had to use a
hatch in the landing to get up there. It was packed with old furniture,
suitcases, and boxes filled with the most amazing things. To a twelve-year-old,
this was an Aladdin’s cave of treasures. That morning we’d been rummaging
through boxes when we found a steamer trunk pushed into a corner. It looked
like a pirates chest.
“Would
you look at that,” said Johnny, pulling it under the light.
“Open
it up,” I said, imagining it full to the brim with gold and treasure. Little
did I realise that the treasure it contained was much more valuable than any
ruddy gems. Johnny flipped the clasps, opening the lid gave with a rusty creak.
The first thing that came out of the trunk was the stuff of dreams. It was a
Second World War helmet, with a bullet hole. Can you imagine, a real bullet hole?
This helmet must have saved a soldier’s life, why else would anyone keep a
helmet with a hole in it. In my mind I could see him peeking out of a fox hole
when, Ping, the German sniper gets him, blowing the helmet
clear off his head. Johnny sat the helmet on his thick curls as he ducked
behind boxes, making a pistol out of his fingers.
We
soon delved deeper into the trunk and found a gas mask, a funny torch with a
red lens which was bent in half, a bunch of black and white photos and a load
of letters all tied up with a blue ribbon. Down at the bottom of the trunk a
uniform, boots and all. We both had a go at putting it on, but it was miles too
big. While I was strutting around pretending to be on parade, I felt a strange
bulge in the breast pocket. It a field manual for the Irish Ranger Unit
– 1943. On the inside cover was pencilled the name, Private James
Quigley. Just imagine the places this little book had been. It
could have ridden across oceans under bombardment from sky and sea. It could
have parachuted out over enemy lines. All the adventures this little book had
and it ended up with us.
For
the rest of the morning we read through the little book. A lot of it was just
lists of rules and regulations, none of which mattered a jot to Johnny or me.
It was at the back we came across a section called, Disruption of Enemy Activities. In here, it described how to put a
land mine in a sock coated with grease so it would stick to the tracks of a
tank, it described how to cut communication lines, report on troop movements
and improvise explosives from readily available materials.
“That
can’t be true,” said Johnny.
“Why
not,” I asked, believing that the Irish Ranger Unit knew more about making
bombs than two twelve-year olds.
“I’ve
never seen sugar blow up anything, except Mary’s backside.” Mary was
Johnny’s second cousin and they hated each other. She always called him stupid
and he called her big arse, which was at least technically true.
“It
says here, you have to mix it with an ignition source, and a detonator;
whatever they are.”
“I
bet we could build one, just a small one,” said Johnny, bubbling over with
excitement. Now I know you’re thinking, this is a bad idea, but you have to
remember we’re talking about two twelve-year olds with a trunk full of Second
World War stuff and heads full of dreams. The only thing better than blowing
something up, would be blowing it up twice. That was how, operation
boom, was born.
“Read
back over that bit,” Johnny said. He preferred to do the thinking and planning;
I was relegated to the secretarial pool.
“It
says, items such as icing sugar and nitrogen rich dry fertiliser, can be used
to create an expanding gas explosion. A detonator is needed to begin the
reaction, such as gun powder, or explosive fluid, and a fuse.”
“Most
of that stuff is just lying about the place. There are bags of icing sugar in
the press and tonnes of 10/10/20 in the barn. But where will we get some gunpowder?”
Johnny wondered aloud, walking around the attic stroking his chin like some mad
scientist.
“It
said we could use explosive fluid. Petrol might work,” I offered.
“It’ll
make the sugar all squidgy. I can’t see that blowing up,” scoffed Johnny.
“What
if we filled a balloon with it, and put that inside the sugar?”
“You’re
a genius,” Johnny said, jumping around like a loon and slapping me on the back.
We
snuck in the kitchen and Johnny pinched a bag of icing sugar while I distracted
his granny. We took a bucket of fertiliser from the shed and filled a jam-jar
with petrol from the lawn mower. I had to run home to get balloon because Johnny
had none. We got to work in our laboratory, better known as the potting shed.
“I
still don’t see how this will explode,” I ventured.
“I
think we have to get it all wrapped up together; good and tight. You mix the
sugar and the fertiliser, I’ll find something to do the job,” he said, running
off towards the house.
“How
much will I mix,” I called after him.
“How
do I know. Guess,” he shouted over his shoulder. I found a big flower pot and
mixed scoops of sugar and fertiliser equally until I ran out of sugar. Then I
poured some petrol into a balloon. Johnny came crashing back into the shed, in
one hand he had a pair of tights, in the other he held a pair of his grans
thick woollen socks.
“What
do you think, will these work?” I eyed the two options. I didn’t fancy handling
Johnny’s Granny’s tights, so pointed to the socks. “They’ll do the job, I think.
All we need now is a fuse.
“Ah,
I was thinking about that,” said Johnny, dropping to his knees stripping the
laces from one of his shoes. He held the lace out, “What do you think?”
“Perfect,”
I agreed, and we got to work making our bomb.
We
tied the lace around the petrol filled balloon, put it in the sock and then
packed the sugar/fertiliser mix around it. We tied the top of the sock with a
piece of string. I have to admit it came out great. It looked like it could go,
bang, at any second.
“What
will we blow up?” I asked.
“What
about the stone wall around the widow Flannigan’s paddock. Gran said she is
nothing but a strap anyway.”
We
ran across the fields and picked a spot in the wall, near a big tree. We could
set the fuse and then run behind the tree to shelter from the blast, assuming
that is the tree wasn’t ripped from the ground by the explosion. Johnny wedged
the furry bomb into a crevice in the wall, then struck a match, but the lace
wouldn’t light. The most he managed was to singe the plastic bit on the end.
“Run
back to the shed and bring the jar of petrol,” he shouted at me, and I didn’t
have to be told twice. My feet flew across the fields. I was back in no time,
with the golden liquid sploshing around inside the jam-jar. Johnny unscrewed
the lid and dipped the end of the lace into the petrol, letting it fully soak. This
time it was sure to work.
You
could cut the tension with a knife as Johnny drew the box of matches, one last
time. The head of the match flared and he moved the flame closer to the petrol
soaked shoe lace. As soon as the flame licked the lace, it shot along it, faster
than the eye could see. Johnny had over-soaked the lace. We never got to take a
step before it went off, and go off it did. It was more a, Phifft, than
a bang. We were enveloped in a huge plume of stinking smoke. Chocking
and half blind, we picked ourselves off the ground. When the acidic smoke
cleared, the Widow Flannigan’s wall stood exactly as it had before. Johnny
turned to me, face streaked with soot and tears, his voice raw from inhaling
the stinging smoke he croaked, “Perhaps we should have used the tights.”
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