Authors: Tracy Alexander
‘Hugo, you were a good friend of Samiya’s.’
‘That’s right. We met when I joined her school in Year 11.’
He’d taken Dan’s place on the sofa. Wearing an immaculate white shirt, sitting with one leg casually crossed over the other, he was clearly loving his moment in the spotlight.
Stupid me.
I’d seen the documentary about the White Widow. That was the sort of thing journalists did. Interview old school friends, neighbours … parents …
Please, not my parents.
Hugo described how, after the drone attack in Yemen, I went from being a popular girl to a loner.
‘My sister and I used to talk about her a lot.’ He turned to give the camera the benefit of his good looks. ‘We were worried about her.’
Two minutes’ worth of chatting with no substance and it seemed she was done with Hugo.
I held my breath, waiting to see who else they’d persuaded to talk about me …
Lucy? No she would never do that.
… but the interviewer started summing up the case.
‘Dan Langley is yet another victim of the unequal Extradition Act. British courts were satisfied that Dan was duped by the real criminal, whom he knew as Angel, yet the Home Secretary allowed …’
The screen switched to show a photo of a gorgeous couple. A pale boy with blond hair and beautiful eyes, and a girl with shiny dark hair and eyes, coffee-coloured skin, and a smile on her lips.
It was the one Hugo’d taken of us in his bedroom, our heads on his pillow.
I tuned back into the words.
‘After the break, Faces of
Extradition
will delve into the life of …’
I needed to react, but none of my synapses were firing.
My face was on the television.
It wasn’t a blurred newspaper photograph, but a glossy close-up.
Someone would recognise me.
Move, Saffron.
I ran upstairs, tore off my pyjamas, pulled on a dress, grabbed my rucksack, shoved my phone and purse in the front pocket and zipped it up. Clothes I could do without.
The doorbell rang. I froze. Considered climbing out of the window.
Don’t overreact.
It rang a second time.
‘I’ll get it!’ shouted Polly.
I stood still. Praying for it to be a chugger.
‘Saffron! It’s for you.’
The most important thing was to stay calm. The photo had only just appeared on the telly – my visitor couldn’t have seen it.
Breathe.
I walked downstairs to the kitchen, knowing it could only be one person. I should have expected him after our stilted chat earlier.
‘He’s fit,’ whispered Polly as I passed her on the stairs.
I didn’t respond. I needed to get rid of him – that was all I could think of.
‘Hi,’ said Liam, kissing me. ‘I was out running and thought I’d pop in.’
My smile was as plastic as Barbie’s.
‘You don’t mind?’
I shook my head.
‘I know you said you were cooking, but I saw Freddie in the park, so I figured …’
Say something, Saffron.
‘He’s gone to meet Elisa.’ I raised an eyebrow. ‘Even put on a clean shirt!’
‘Is that a pointed comment?’ Liam looked down at his sweaty Nike vest.
‘I could come round to yours later, if you like – when you’re clean.’
‘Or you could come with me now,’ he said, his hand round the back of my neck, about to kiss me again.
I wriggled away. Everything was coming crashing down around me. Minutes counted.
‘I was about to have a bath. I’ll come in an hour.’
I sounded completely wooden – he could tell something was up.
I made myself lean across and kiss him.
‘Go away and wash!’
That was better – more like me.
‘All right. Whatever you say.’
He gave me an odd look, with his head tilted slightly over.
What’s going on?
it said.
‘Bye, then.’
He opened the door and was gone.
I raced back upstairs to get my bag. On the way back down Polly poked her head out.
‘Everything all right?’
‘Fine. That was my boyfriend, Liam. I’m going over to his.’
‘He looked nice. How long have you been —?’
‘I need to get going. I’ve …’ My mind was blank. I pushed past her.
‘OK. See you.’
I went out of the kitchen door and walked, with my head down, towards Woodhouse Lane to catch a bus. There was only one thought in my head – get away from Leeds.
‘Saff!’
It was Mack. He was standing on the other side of the road, talking to Liam.
‘You were on the telly!’ he shouted.
Liam was in front of me in an instant, blocking my way, with Mack close behind him. I had nothing to say, so I waited for him to speak.
‘Mack says you’re —’
‘The Dronejacker,’ said Mack. ‘You need to get away, Saff. You were on the telly. My mum rang the cops. You need to go.’
There was no time to try to persuade Liam that it was all a mistake. I’d already wasted ten – or more – minutes getting out of the house.
‘Let me go,’ I said. ‘It’s not what it seems, but until I can prove that I need —’
Looking at Liam’s face was unbearable.
‘I don’t understand …’
A car turned onto Brudenell Road and accelerated past us. It was the police. As soon as they got to the house, Polly would say I’d just left and they’d be on my tail.
I pushed past Liam and ran.
I sprinted up Brudenell Road towards the park. Liam must have taken a moment to react, but was soon right behind me, his trainers thumping the pavement. I ran straight across Hyde Park Road without looking. A car swerved to avoid me – horn blaring. Liam had to wait to cross, giving me a badly needed few seconds’ lead.
I ran across the grass. My chest was tight, my breathing heavy. If I could cut the corner and get to Woodhouse Lane, there was a chance I could dodge the traffic, lose them in the streets down by The Swan with Two Necks and make it to the taxi company that used a Portakabin as its HQ.
‘Saffron, wait!’ shouted Liam.
I willed my legs to go faster, but as the main road came into view I could see a police car, blue lights flashing. I changed direction, but there were more lights flickering through the trees.
I was trapped.
I couldn’t think where the bomb was. Nine hours into its journey – did that mean it was in the sky? Or already landed?
It didn’t matter. I couldn’t let it all be for nothing. It was where it was.
As I turned round to face Liam, I shouted, ‘Keep away!’
He stayed right where he was, maybe ten metres from me.
Mack – his little legs whirring like a cartoon – caught up.
‘Saff!’
He looked like he was going to run over to me, but Liam grabbed his shoulder.
‘Stay with me, mate.’
I slipped the rucksack off my back and held it in front of my chest, keeping my eyes on Liam’s face, but not seeing him. If I’d had the phone in my hand, I could have called the number already, but it was in the zipped pocket – for safekeeping.
Before I had a chance to do anything else, a circle of police – five, no six – appeared from nowhere.
‘Samiya, my name’s Mike,’ said a policeman in a blue shirt, walking slowly forward and stopping beside Liam. ‘I need you to put the bag down and put your hands in the air.’
‘Stay away!’ I shouted, keeping the bag where it was. ‘I’m not Samiya.’
‘All right,’ said Mike, before turning to Liam. ‘I need you to move back, please, sir.’
‘No,’ said Liam. ‘I’m staying here.’
Mack stayed glued to Liam’s side.
‘For your safety, if you and the boy could —’
‘I said
no
.’
I took advantage of the moment, swung the rucksack so it was under my arm and unzipped the pocket.
Mike didn’t like that one bit.
‘Put the bag
down!
’
‘Put it down, Saff!’ shouted Mack, a cry in his voice.
The circle crept forward. I was aware of a hum in the background. The sound of passers-by stopping to watch, back-up teams, a journalist – alerted by Twitter …
The sound of a situation developing.
It had been fifteen minutes at most since my face had appeared on the telly. Too short a time for there to have been any verification. I was a suspect. No more. Nice policemen from Yorkshire wouldn’t do anything rash.
‘Please, Saffron,’ said Liam.
‘Saffron,’ said Mike, ‘do as I say and we can sort this out. Put the bag down.’
The voice was commanding. It made me want to obey. But I couldn’t fail again. Who was I, if I gave up on the one thing that had defined me for so long?
A movement to the left caught my eye. A policeman moved to make space for a man wearing a white shirt and one of those black bulletproof vests. He raised his rifle – an MP5 Carbine – to shoulder height and pointed it at me, then adjusted it slightly. I didn’t look
behind, but sensed a second marksman had taken up position there.
I’d never considered that I might die. Surely no one would shoot a teenage girl …?
The fear was like something pressing on me. Heavy. Yet my thoughts were light, flighty, leaping about.
Death was sometimes the price …
One girl might have to sacrifice herself for the greater good. But not before she’d made her point …
My fingers were so close to the trigger, but so were theirs.
I needed to take control. But it was hard …
What would they do if I took out my phone? Everyone knows a phone can be a detonator.
I counted down in my head from five, building my courage.
Five …
Four …
Three …
Two …
I reached into the pocket and grabbed the phone, dropping the bag.
‘Hands in the air!’ screamed the man.
I did as he said, pressing the four digits of my passcode with my thumb.
‘Saffron! No!’ I heard Liam shout.
There was a stillness. An unreal quiet. As though the air itself was holding its breath.
‘Drop the phone
now
or we
will
shoot!’ yelled Mike.
‘Nooooo!’ screamed Mack. As I looked up, he broke free from Liam’s hold and ran towards me. It was the diversion I needed.
I pressed –
Phone
Contacts
B
The call connected instantly.
I locked eyes with Liam.
Heard the shot ————
First published in Great Britain in 2015
by Piccadilly Press
Northburgh House, 10 Northburgh Street,
London EC1V 0AT
Copyright © Tracy Alexander 2015
The moral rights of the author have been asserted.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978–1–848–12444–8
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Typeset by Palimpsest Book Production Limited, Falkirk, Stirlingshire
Printed and bound by Clays Ltd, St Ives Plc
Piccadilly Press is part of the Bonnier Publishing Group
www.bonnierpublishing.com
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