Текст книги "The Weight of Souls"
Автор книги: Bryony Pearce
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Текущая страница: 17 (всего у книги 17 страниц)
“That’s alright,” I grinned. “I take lunch money.”
With an explosive laugh, Pete shoved me and I lurched to my feet. Together we followed Justin into the street. The school loomed in front of us, a promise of a difficult day ahead.
Justin caught my hands and pulled me close. “I’m going to patrol; it’ll be better than just hanging in one place.”
My heart rose as his head dropped and his lips hovered over mine. Pete cleared his throat and turned away. The faintest hint of breath touched my mouth and I opened my eyes in surprise as Justin kissed me. I pressed my lips against his and inhaled him in; the intensity of his scent, the suggestion of moisture on his skin, traces of life. My lungs tightened and my heart raced. I clenched my fingers in his blazer until I felt my knees begin to quake, then I pulled away with a tremulous sigh.
Justin stroked my cheek with his fingertips. “I’ll be here at lunchtime if you want to see me.”
I smiled. “I want to see you.”
“Alright then.” He stepped backward. I’d better get on with it.” He glanced at the school gate, as if he wished he was going in with me and I released his hand. He grinned and his hair flopped into his face. “Have a nice day.” He jerked his head. “Get going.”
“I’ll miss you.” I swung my backpack and headed for the entrance. “See you later.”
Pete jogged until his stride matched mine. “So… you and Justin…”
“Yes.” The smile crept back onto my cooling lips.
“He’s dead.” Pete shuddered.
“Yes.” I raised my eyebrows.
“OK then.” Pete stuck his arm through mine and I froze momentarily. Then I carried on walking as if nothing had happened, terrified of breaking this fragile new thing between us.
“This is going to take a bit of getting used to,” he said and I nodded, looking for the first time in years at the flowers in the beds, the noticeboard by the main office and the mural on the outside of the sixth form centre.
Then I really did freeze. Hannah was walking from the direction of the library.
“What has she done to her hair?” My horror was focused so strongly on the travesty that I barely saw the two girls walking arm in arm with her.
Pete hissed through his teeth. “It doesn’t suit her.”
I blinked, blindsided, as the three came closer, all with matching alice-bands and brown shoulder-length bobs. Hannah’s hair was still a mass of frizz, but she had tried to tame it with some product or other and it hung, lifelessly, along her face.
She was leaning into the girl on the left, giggling at something she said. Then she saw Pete with his arm in mine. Her feet tangled in one another and she would have tripped if she hadn’t been held up by her new friends.
“We need to talk,” I called.
“There’s nothing to talk about.”
Her new friends raised their heads and the trio started to march around us.
“Please, Han.” I injected a note of pleading in my voice. Her chin jutted, she was hardening her heart against me.
“Just for a minute.” Pete weighed in on my side and I suppressed a surprised gasp. “Hear her out and if you still aren’t interested, I won’t let her bother you again.”
I bit my tongue. If Hannah didn’t cave for Pete, then she wasn’t going to.
“Come on, Hannah, we were going to the music room, remember.” Her new friends tugged on her arm, but to my delight she pulled free.
“I’ll meet you there.” She waved them off. “I have a thing to do here. It won’t take long.”
I didn’t take my eyes from her face, as the muttered complaints of her new friends grew more distant.
“I… like your hair,” I started.
Her hand rose, as if to touch the alice-band, then stopped and dropped to her side. “What do you want?”
“I haven’t been fair to you.” I tried to move closer, but Hannah stepped back, out of my orbit, and I stopped. “I know I cancel arrangements at the last minute and blow you off with no explanation. I’ve been a lousy friend. But, things are going to change and I want to tell you what’s been going on with me.”
Hannah glared at Pete. “You were the one who told me not to bother with her any more and now look at you. Were you just trying to get me out of the way?”
Pete shook his head with a snort. “She’s going to tell you what she told me, Han. It’ll be hard to believe, but you should listen.” He released my arm and backed off. “I’ll save you a table in the common room.”
I edged nearer to Hannah. “Can we sit? There’s a bench.” I gestured to the side and she nodded.
“I’m not staying,” she snapped, but her knees folded and she sat.
“It started when I was ten,” I began. “That’s when I began seeing ghosts…”
Pete grinned widely as we entered the common room. Hannah’s arm was tucked through my elbow and when we strode past the lockers her bag swung against my knees. He stood up when we drew close.
“You believe her?” He put his head near to Hannah’s.
Hannah nodded. Her alice-band was at the bottom of her bag and her hair was beginning to defy the heavy product she had attacked it with, frothing out around her cheeks once more.
“You didn’t need proof?” He looked at me for confirmation.
“I’m going to take her to see Justin at lunchtime. But she believes me anyway.” I squeezed her tightly.
“I’m mad at her for not trusting me.” Hannah fluffed out her hair and gave me a stern glare. “I can see why she thought I’dbe cynical. Not.”
I looked contrite. “I’m sorry. I am. But I wouldn’t have believed someone who told me they saw ghosts, not before it happened to me. I didn’t want to risk losing either of you.”
Hannah pushed me onto the plastic chair and the curved edged bit into my thighs. She stood over me, hands on hips. “Honesty from now on.” She turned to include Pete. “I mean it. No more secrets.”
“No more secrets.” I hid a smile.
She jiggled with excitement. “This is so cool, my best friend sees ghosts.”
“What’s going on here?” Mr Barnes loomed above me and automatically I leaped to my feet. He ignored Hannah and spoke to Pete and me. “In my office. Now.”
Mr Barnes sat behind his desk, glowering from beneath lowered brows. Pete and I stood in front of him, like naughty children. His hand came down on his desk with a bang that made us jump.
“I’ve had parents on the phone. Tamsin’s, Harley’s and James’ to be exact. Their brood didn’t come home last night.”
“Just like Justin,” I muttered.
“What was that, Taylor?”
“Nothing.” I looked him in the eye. He shifted uncomfortably.
“Peter, I want you to tell me straight up. Is this going to be another case like Justin Hargreaves?”
“Like Justin?” Pete’s eyes widened.
“Don’t play dumb with me, boy, is this something to do with the club? And if so, will it look like an accident?”
I staggered sideways, catching Pete’s elbow to stop my legs from folding. “You don’t care that they might be injured or dead?”
“I care very much.” Mr Barnes rose to his feet. “But I’m not a paramedic. My job is not to save lives.”
“Then what is your job?” I leaned forward. “You’re our head teacher, you’re meant to care.”
“I care.” He pushed his glasses up on his nose. “You’re new, Taylor, so you have no idea yet what V can do for you in the coming years. Right now I have to do damage control. Your group has caused more problems than any other year group. I need to know what has happened to them, so I can tell our friend on the force.”
“You mean so he can cover things up.” Horror had blanched my face. My cheeks were cold as if I’d had water thrown on me.
“If necessary.” He smiled, all crocodile-teeth. “If you were involved in what happened then you should be grateful to have an adult on your side. That’s another advantage of V.”
I slipped my arm out of Pete’s and deliberately slowly I leaned on the desk. “Don’t worry. James, Harley and Tamsin won’t be found, not by the police, not by anybody.”
Mr Barnes blinked. “You’re certain about that?”
“Very. And I’m also certain that V is shutting down.”
Mr Barnes guffawed, but his fingers were twisting nervously in his tie. “V shut down? You aren’t thinking straight.”
I curled my lip. “V is over. Four kids from one year-group are gone now. The authorities are going to have to start looking closely at the place. I’ll speak to parents, newspapers, anyone who will listen. It won’t be a secret society anymore. I imagine you’ll lose your job.”
Mr Barnes stood unmoving as though he’d been sent to Anubis. Then slowly his fingers uncurled from his tie. His mouth seized, eating invisible limes. Sour lines appeared on his face. “You’re a nasty piece of work, Miss Oh.” His small mustache twitched. “They should never have let you join V. I have no idea why they did. They were better kids than you could ever be.”
“Wait a minute.” Pete jerked, but I gestured him into quiet.
“All you want to do is destroy things for everybody else. I’ve seen your grades, when you get out of here you’ll be a nobody. You won’t be getting into university, I have no idea who’d employ a loser like you.” Mr Barnes leaned forward. “But if you remain quiet and stay in V there is at least one university that will take you on, no questions. You’ll walk into a good job when you leave. You’ll have prospects. Imagine how proud your dad will be.”
My breath stopped in my chest. Dad was losing hope. If I could go to university he’d be delighted. He would feel as if he’d beaten the curse. It would be a perfect gift.
Like a shark scenting blood in the water, Mr Barnes could feel me wavering. He smiled like a benevolent grandfather. “Think of what your poor, dead mother would have wanted for you.”
My head snapped up. “You’re right.” I pictured her face. “I should think of Mum. She would never want this for me.”
“Too true.” He took off his glasses and rubbed them on the inside of his jacket. “So enough of this nonsense. Let’s talk about your friends.”
“No.” I panted as if I’d run a marathon. “Mum wouldn’t want me in the V Club, she was honourable.” I dug my nails into my palms. “She believed in justice.” I looked out of the window. There was a dark haired boy in a school uniform standing outside the gates, looking up at Mr Barnes’ office as though he could see me through the window. “Justin wouldn’t want me to stop either. I’m taking the V Club down, Mr Barnes. So get ready.”
I spun around and headed for the office door.
“Miss Oh,” Mr Barnes voice was low and snarling. “You don’t want to make an enemy of me.”
I grinned sourly. “Perhaps it’s me who makes a bad enemy.”
“Are you threatening me?” He turned apoplectic purple and I shook my head.
“You should think about what I said.” I paused with my hand on the door. “Pete and I have to get to registration.”
Pete caught up with me and his face was almost as pale as Hannah’s. “What have you done?” He shook himself like a dog.
33
The light seeker
Gabriel Oh rocked back and forth on his wheels, teeth on his bottom lip, pencil tapping the leather of his armrests. It didn’t make sense.
He had both The Tale of Oh-Faand the Professor’s notebook open in front of him. The Taledescribed how Oh-Fa himself had found the image of Anubis carved into a stone tablet in the sand. He considered the text.
As I brushed sand aside, as I have done a million times before, the visage of a dog’s head on a man’s body resolved itself.
The Professor’s translation of the tablet Oh-Fa had discovered was scribbled over three pages in his book. The first part of the translation was a fairly standard curse. Gabriel had seen other similar stanzas when Emma had sought the right words to carve on the house, to protect herself and Taylor from the ghosts. He swallowed; he had to re-evaluate every memory of his wife. Regret every harsh word he’d ever said about the illness. But not now. He turned back to the curse:
“This is a way, but not the true way.
Death comes to he who enters the tomb
through the Darkness on clawed feet.
He will be nowhere and his house will be nowhere;
he will be one proscribed, one who eats himself.”
In The Talethe beast was described as having clawed feet. He paged through until he found the passage. Then he muttered out loud. A clawed foot slid towards me…
So the threat was quite literal. Anyone who entered the tomb the wrong way would be killed by the clawed beast waiting inside. “And they entered the wrong way,” he muttered. “They walked into the darkness, straight into a beast waiting to kill them.”
That did make sense. But the second part of the translation did not.
“He who is in the place of embalming.
Is hungry for the world.
Bound to the queen’s tomb by the priests of Horus.
Until the coming of the light-seeker –
Not living, not dead, not a child, not a man.”
As for him who shall destroy this inscription: He shall not reach his home. He shall not embrace his children. He shall not see success.
“ He who is in the place of embalming” was another name for Anubis. Given that the first half of the curse appeared to have come true, could the rest of the inscription be taken seriously?
“ Bound to the queen’s tomb by the priests of Horus.”
Gabriel booted up his computer then nodded to himself; Horus had been Anubis' enemy.
The beast had named himself to Oh-Fa: “ If I kill you there will be no more death for Anubis.”
So the priests of Horus had somehow bound the god Anubis to the tomb of the dead queen.
And he was stuck there until the coming of the light seeker.
Gabriel’s mind span over Taylor's words when she had returned to him: “ He led us towards the light.”
A chill numbed Gabriel until his whole body felt as dull as his useless legs. The pencil dropped from his frozen fingers.
“Not living, not dead. Justin was dead, but he had Taylor's life-force.” His chair shuddered as he started to move, to shake. “Not a child, not a man – they wouldn't have had the word 'teenager' back then.” His rubbed his face with his hands.
If the Professor's translation was correct, then Taylor and the ghost with her had just given Anubis what he needed to free himself.
Sick to the core he gripped the image of his wife, the one that always sat on his desk. “Can I believe this?” He looking into her eyes; caught on camera in a rare moment of light-hearted humour. “I didn't believe you. I must have made your life so much more difficult.” Tears wet his stubbled chin. “I'm sorry.”
He rubbed the picture like an aged Aladdin, somehow hoping she would speak back to him. “But this. Is it one step too far? Am I now being too credulous, believing the one thing I should not? Who would I even tell, what warning could I give?” The picture remained only that and he replaced it sadly next to the paired books.
“No.” He shook his head. “This I don’t believe.”
He closed the books and headed for the door. Taylor and Justin were due home from school soon and he owed her some time and hot chocolate. For at least one day, the family curse could wait.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To my agent, the wonderful Juliet Mushens of The Agency Group, who believed in my writing and bashed it into shape with me. She is an inspiration.
To my editor, Amanda Rutter of Strange Chemistry, whose inciteful comments and hard work brought out the best in my manuscript.
To my family and friends, whose belief and support are invaluable, and to my in-laws Pat and Charles Pearce, whose practical help enabled the book to be completed.
To my existing readers, who have sent fantastic emails, messages and notes of support. Thank you.
And finally to my husband and children: Andy, Maisie and Riley. One day I trust that you will read and enjoy my work. In the meantime you inspire me and I love you more with every breath.