Blood Of Angels (46 page)

Read Blood Of Angels Online

Authors: Michael Marshall

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Crime & Thriller, #Adventure, #Thriller, #Fiction

BOOK: Blood Of Angels
8.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

'So let's go get that school shut down.'

Chapter 36

We ignored the building we'd already entered and went through the arch to the other entrance. A staircase on the right of the courtyard here took us into more promising territory. This was the school's biggest and oldest building and it made sense the ranking staff would have their lairs here. The ground floor held classrooms arranged on long corridors at right angles. They were deserted. In my recollection someone was always wandering the halls at school, skipping this class, faking that injury, goofing off pure and simple: Thornton High evidently ran a tighter ship. I finally saw a kid in the distance, walking across the far end of one of the corridors, but he didn't respond to a shout and was gone before we got there. The layout on the floor above was the same, with the addition of a big empty room that looked like a science lab. At the top of the building we found offices with panelling on the outside, and down the end a door of a size that could only mean one thing. It was slightly ajar. The sign said A L SINGER, PRINCIPAL.

We entered an anteroom in which a matronly woman sat behind an ancient word processor. She looked at us disapprovingly and I felt about twelve years old.

'Who are you?'

'We have to talk to the principal,' I said. 'Now.'

'She's on the telephone.'

I followed John over to the second door, which was shut. He opened it to reveal a bigger space with a lavish desk in the middle. Behind it sat another woman, who was of course not on the phone. The walls held ranks of serious books and black-and-white photos of worthy predecessors and people formally shaking hands. A window beyond her gave a view out onto the front lawns.

'You have to evacuate the school,' John said.

The woman stared at us. She was tall with bouffant hair and would have looked equally at home kicking butt in the boardroom of a Fortune 500 company.

'What are you talking about? Who are you?'

'Someone's about to launch an attack on this school.'

The woman stood slowly. 'Someone… how? What on earth makes you think that?'

'We don't have time to go into it,' I said. 'Please just take our word it's a very strong possibility.'

The woman reached for the phone on the corner of her desk. John got there first and put his hand on it. The principal pursed her lips and spoke to someone over my shoulder.

'Jane, call the police, would you, and then get Ben up here right away. Tell him we have intruders.'

I turned to see the woman from the outer office was standing in the doorway. 'Please don't do that,' I said.

Something distracted the woman and she ducked out of sight. I turned back to the principal.

'Ms Singer,' I said. 'I know this is weird. But you have to believe what we're telling you.'

'Of course I don't. If there's a threat to this school the police would have contacted me.'

'We just discussed the situation with one of them,' I said. 'It's not certain they can be trusted.'

'Can't be… good grief. Jane, get Ben up here. Right now.'

There was no response from the outer office, but then we heard the older woman's voice querulously upbraiding someone. The door was abruptly pulled wide.

A kid walked in. It was the kid with the skateboard we'd encountered outside the gate — except by now it was clear to me he was not a kid and he did not attend this school or any other. He started talking straight away, injured and self-righteous.

'Ma'am, I was standing outside the gate and two guys came and hassled me. These two guys right here.'

The woman stared at him. I sensed her days didn't usually go like this. 'Who are you? I don't remember you.'

'Jason Scott, ma'am. These men tried to get me to go with them in their car.'

The woman swept her gaze back to John. 'Give me back my phone. The police can deal with this.'

John kept his hand on the handset. The woman opened a drawer in her desk and pulled out a cell phone instead.

'Okay, fuck it,' I said, angrily. 'Call the cops, Ms Singer. Whatever. But in the meantime please get everyone the hell out of this building. What's
wrong
with you? We're telling you the school is in danger. Are you hearing that? Do you want to take the risk?'

'I wouldn't listen to them, ma'am,' said the kid. He giggled suddenly. 'One of them showed me his dick.'

I tried to get through to her. 'You've never seen this kid before. Come on, think — have you? He doesn't go to school here. Do you recognize him at all?'

'I can't remember every…'

'Look his name up. See if there's a Jason Scott on the school roll. But do it fast.'

She turned towards the computer sitting on the end of her desk, but without any real sense of purpose. I used all my reserves of patience not to leap at her.

'Ma'am, either evacuate this place or we'll do it for you.'

A voice called: 'Principal?'

It was the woman in the outer office. 'There's something wrong with the phones,' she said. You could hear her tapping her handset impatiently. 'I can't get an outside line.'

The principal looked at me. Suddenly I wasn't the strangest thing in her life.

'Really,' I said, holding her eyes. 'Do it, and do it now.'

'All right, Jane,' she said. 'Sound the fire alarm. Right away.'

The young man with the skateboard smiled thinly. 'Jeez, but you guys are a pain in the ass.'

He dropped his skateboard and pulled a gun with a snub silencer out of the front pocket of his sweater. He shot the principal in the head, turned and ran straight out the door.

By the time John and I had our guns out I'd heard the soft clap of another muffled gunshot. I ran out into the other office to see the older woman lying sprawled against the wall, legs still moving but her face pressed down into the carpet. The back of her head wasn't there.

'Find the alarm,' John said, and went running out past me.

I searched all around the office but couldn't find any way of setting the alarm off. Then I realized there must be triggers out in the hallways. I hurried out and down the corridor, banging a fist on every door as I passed. By the time I got to the stairs there were puzzled heads sticking out of most of the rooms.

'There's a fire,' I said, as calmly and convincingly as I could. 'Get everybody out.'

'Where?' someone asked. 'What fire?'

I abandoned calm and pointed a gun at him. 'Just fucking do it.'

I ran down to the floor below and saw John tearing across the next intersection. I headed after him and soon passed an alarm box. I smashed the glass with my elbow and jabbed hard at the big red button.

Nothing happened.

I hit it again, this time with the palm of my hand. Then pushed it more gently, but still driving it in as far as it would go.

'Oh Christ,' I said, and went running up to the next intersection. I found another alarm point and broke the glass with my fist. Palm-hit the button again and again.

Nothing. I turned and saw John heading towards me, gun out.

'They've disabled the alarm system,' I said. 'Forget that other guy. We're going to have to alert people ourselves.'

He went running off down the corridor and yanked open the first door he came to. I heard him shouting at the people inside. I went the other way and did the same. I opened the door on a roomful of people sitting staring at the front as if hypnotized.

'Evacuation,' I said, back to calm and convincing. 'We believe there's a fire. Get out of the building now.'

The school's fire drills must have been good. Everyone got up quickly but in an orderly fashion. 'Tell anybody else you see,' I added, as an afterthought. 'Nobody run. Just get out of here and be careful.'

This is going to be okay
I thought, as they filed quickly past. Ten minutes, and this place will be clear and I can get on with what matters.

Out in the corridor I confirmed other classrooms were emptying. Then out through a window I saw John had left the building and was walking purposefully across the lawns below, heading back to the first building. Maybe he was just on the way to clear that one out too, but he had a look in his eye and I decided I'd better be with him.

I pushed my way through a loud buzz of kids and got down the stairs as quickly as I could. The lower hall was full of milling bodies and their movement was far quicker down here: quicker, and a little out of control.

I heard shouting and realized somebody had found out what had happened to the principal and her assistant. A middle-aged man in a tweed jacket was stumbling down the stairs, blustering to another teacher, far too loud. He looked like just the kind of guy who'd have to check with the principal before following a simple instruction to get the hell out of a building that might be on fire.

I shoved my way back to him, grabbed his lapels and got my face up close.

'Shut it,' I said, quietly. 'Stop talking now.'

He stared at me. 'What? What happened to…'

I spoke low and fast. 'Ms Singer is dead. But these people do not need to know that right now. Don't cause a panic. Just help them leave the building as quickly as possible.'

The man stared at me. 'You don't work here. Who are you?'

'Just some guy,' I said, pushing him on his way. 'Now
move.'

Chapter 37

Lee wasn't sure what to do now. He'd done his job, talked to a few people, come across like a friendly person and passed out party favours for them to try. He still didn't understand how this was worth doing when it didn't seem even slightly likely they'd be here to sell the next batch, but he'd done what he was told — as a prelude to not doing it next time. He'd been on his way out, ready to latch up with Paul outside the gates and demand to be put on something more worthwhile, when he heard somebody call his name. He looked up to see two extremely suspicious-looking dudes in black heading quickly through the school gates and across the lawns.

They were after some other kid at first — too far away to see if it was one of the ones he'd passed drugs to — and Lee could have kicked himself for looking up the way he did. It was amateur. Even Sleepy Pete would have had the presence of mind not to do something like that. But once it was done, you had to make the best of it. Lee ducked back into the school building as smoothly as possible, and made himself scarce in the maze of corridors. He heard one of the guys running into the building after him, but the familiarity of the layout made it easy for him to keep some distance ahead.

He'd been crouched down the end of the lower corridor, waiting to see what direction he should head in next, when he saw something that spun him out. It looked a hell of a lot like Paul, running into the building. Lee blinked, and it still looked like Paul, even though he was dressed differently and he was sure it was one of the guys in black from outside. The guy stood absolutely still for a moment, like a listening animal, and then sprinted up the stairs to where the other guy had gone.

Lee waited until he heard them come back down again and leave the building in a hurry. Then he slipped back upstairs. He decided he wasn't going anywhere until these two new guys were good and gone. Neither came across like a person it would be advisable to meet.

He'd just decided he'd waited long enough when he noticed there'd been a change in the sound of the world. Previously it had been real quiet — hell of a lot quieter than his school had ever been, that's for sure. Now he could hear people talking. At some distance. Outside?

He went to one of the windows in the side of the corridor, and looked down to see a bunch of kids were beginning to come out of the back of the next building, to stand together in the big area at the back. He looked at his watch and saw it could hardly be the end of the school day. Plus, why would they all be leaving via the back? It looked like a drill or something, though he hadn't heard any alarm go off.

Whatever. Things were getting weird. It was time to be somewhere else.

===OO=OOO=OO===

He was approaching the top of the stairs when he realized someone was coming up them. He was too far committed to make it back to his hiding place. He reminded himself that the two men couldn't have got that good a look at him. He'd been in the bathroom, that's all, seen the drill assembling outside. He was leaving the building, like you were supposed to.

He started walking again and nearly ran slap into the person coming up. It was the young guy with the skateboard, except he didn't have it with him any more. He looked pretty hyped.

'What's going on?' Lee asked.

'We've got a problem,' the guy said. He was trying to keep his cool but riding close to the edge. 'The plan's hitting some turbulence. I've got to check in with Paul.'

He pulled a tiny radio out of his pocket and stabbed at a button. Turned away from Lee and started talking fast in a low tone. He walked away down the corridor, listening, and then glanced up at Lee.

And that's when Lee saw it.

That's when he realized why the guy's face had looked familiar. Yes, he'd been one of the guys in the Belle Isle court, and yes he had probably also been one of the guys who'd stepped out of the shadows the very first time Lee had met Paul. But he'd seen his face in between those times too.

Seen it down the end of an isolated parking lot at night, lit by a car headlamps. He was one of the three guys who hadn't come forward the way they were supposed to, but who hung back and then suddenly went ape.

Lee stood staring at him. Tried to see the guy's face some other way. He couldn't. The picture had locked.

The man pocketed the radio, grinned. He was way into character as a skate slacker, bobbing from foot to foot.

'Apparently this
is
the plan,' he said. 'So, like, upwards and onwards.'

Lee nodded. 'And when exactly did the plan start?'

'What do you mean, bro?'

'I mean, I
thought
it began after a friend of mine got killed and we did the wrong thing and hid his body because we were told to. Hernandez gave us a bad steer on purpose, and I thought things started after that.'

'Right, yeah. Look, we don't have time for…'

Other books

White Lines III by Tracy Brown
Mirage Beyond Flames (Coriola) by De Ross, Melinda
Pedigree by Patrick Modiano
Skybreaker by Kenneth Oppel
Shadows and Silk by Liliana Hart
A History of the Middle East by Peter Mansfield, Nicolas Pelham
An Untamed Heart by Lauraine Snelling