Authors: Sam Enthoven
âThis is ridiculous,' said Ben, getting up. âWe can't just sit here. There's got to be something we can do. Something else we can figure out about this situation â or some way to get word to the outside.'
âLike I said before, mate,' said Josh, looking at his fingernails, âI'm open to suggestions. If you've got something to say I'm sure we'd all be happy to hear it. But if you don't, I'd just as soon you sit down and keep quiet, if you don't mind.' He smiled â or at least, the corners of his mouth lifted: the smile didn't reach his eyes. âHelp will be here soon enough. No sense rocking the boat.'
âI want to have a look at those monitors,' said Ben, advancing towards the door.
âBe my guest,' said Josh. âI'm sure Hugo could use a break, anyhow.'
âWhy,
thank you
, Josh,' said Ben, but he didn't wait to see if Josh caught the sarcasm. âHugo,' he said, closing the door to the monitor room behind him, âwhat's going on?'
Hugo looked up from the screens and blinked. âWhat? Oh . . . nothing.' He gestured. âSee for yourself.'
On all the screens except one, the scenes the cameras were looking at were empty: empty passageways; empty stairwells; empty rooms â no people at all. But on the screen showing the view in the passage outside . . .
This was the first time Ben had seen what was waiting for them, guarding their only exit. These had been ordinary adults on a night out: they were now standing absolutely still, like mannequins.
âHow many of them are out there?' he asked, stifling a shudder.
âTwenty-seven of them that you can see there,' said Hugo. âThere are probably more behind, but I counted all the ones I could. Three times, actually.'
âNot much else to do in here, huh?' said Ben.
âYou're not wrong,' said Hugo drily.
âThat's not all of them out there, though, is it?' asked Ben.
âHow d'you mean?'
âYou think all of the bitten people are out there in the passageway? What about the ones who went out to meet the police? Were they from out there?'
âNot that I saw,' Hugo answered. âIf they did come from the crowd outside, it wasn't from the front row. No one's twitched a muscle in that lot since they stopped trying to break the door down.' He made a face. âIt's freaking me out, frankly.'
âSo maybe,' said Ben, ânot everybody who's been bitten is there.'
Hugo shrugged. âStands to reason, I guess.'
âWell, if they're not out there,' Ben wondered, looking at the empty screens, âwhere
are
they all?'
âBeats me,' said Hugo. âI just work here.'
Ben looked down at the desk at which Hugo was sitting. As well as the congealed remains of a mug of milky coffee and an impressive (and obviously long-lived) collection of empty
sweet wrappers left by its usual occupants, the desk contained a black angled console covered in numbered, grey rubber buttons with, at its centre, a small joystick.
âThis looks like it controls the cameras,' said Ben, reaching for the buttons. âWhy don't we take a look?'
âNow hold on a second,' said Hugo, turning on his chair and putting himself in between Ben and the console. âI don't think that's a good idea.'
âWhat? Why not?'
Hugo pursed his lips. Ben could tell that he didn't like being put in the position of having to stop him â but Ben didn't care.
âCome on, Hugo,' he said. âWhat's the problem?'
âAll right,' said Hugo, âI'll tell you: right now, we've got a good combination. There' â he pointed â âare the two screens showing the main entrance, and we've got this camera showing us what's happening out there in the passage. If we start pressing buttons, we might lose that picture. Then we'd have no idea what they're up to. We'd be defenceless.'
âCobblers,' said Ben. âI'm sure it's not complicated. If that happens we just keep pressing the buttons until the picture comes back.'
âBut what if they attack again while we can't see them?'
âThey won't! They've been standing out there doing nothing for, like, an hour. Besides, what difference would it
make? They'd still be out there and we'd still be stuck in here.' Ben tried to reach past him, butâ
âNo, I'm sorry.' Hugo shook his head. âThere's no way I'm letting you do it. It's too risky.'
âBut . . .' Ben stared at him, amazed. âIsn't it sort of worth the risk? I mean . . . those screens are the only advantage we've got. Apart from a couple of squashed crawlers, they're the only thing that might give us an idea of what's really going on in this place. And you're seriously telling me you won't even take a look?'
Hugo blinked rapidly. âWhat did you call them?' Then he collected himself. âI mean,
no
. No changing the cameras. Or not without Josh's say-so anyhow.' He folded his arms, doing his best to look decisive.
âYou're kidding,' said Ben. âYou need Josh's permission? You won't even press a button without Josh holding your hand?'
âIt's not that,' Hugo blustered. âI just don't think it's a good idea, that's all.'
Ben was going to say exactly what he thought about that, but was interrupted.
âWhat's going on?' Josh asked, closing the door behind him.
âBen wants to change what's on the monitors,' said Hugo promptly.
âWhy?' asked Josh. âYou can't get the Sci-Fi channel on
here, you know.' He smirked at Hugo. âI mean, honestly, Ben:
crawlers
?' Josh shook his head in mock despair, then gave Ben another smile â a smile that was no smile at all.
âWe should try and see what else is going on in the rest of the building,' said Ben, keeping his voice level. How he hated having to explain himself! Especially to Josh. And he might not even have had to, if Hugo'd had the gumption to think for himself. âWe might get some clues about what to do.'
Josh sighed. âBut we know what to do, don't we? We're going to wait here until help comes. We decided.'
â
I
didn't decide,' said Ben.
Josh narrowed his eyes. âExcuse me?'
âI said, I didn't decide. I don't remember it being put to a vote or anything. In fact,' Ben added, ânobody's really asked anybody's opinion at all â and certainly not mine. But it seems to me that somehow we've ended up doing whatever
you
tell us to do, Josh. Why is that, exactly?'
âWhat's the matter, Ben?' asked Josh softly. âYou don't like the way I run things?'
Surprised, Ben didn't reply.
âThat's fine,' said Josh. âReally â it's fine. In school circumstances, I'd be happy to listen to any problems you might have. You know I'd always have time for you, mate.'
âButâ' said Ben.
âBut this isn't school circumstances, is it?' asked Josh, interrupting him again. âThis is something else. Something bad. Something,' he added, âfor which we all have to pull together.'
âWhat?'
âYou know what I'm talking about,' said Josh, leaning back against the door to make sure it was closed behind him. âDon't pretend you don't. I'm talking about those plebs out there.'
There it was again. That word.
âSomeone has to get them through this.' Josh spoke low and quickly now. âSomeone has to
lead them
. They'll bitch and moan, of course. But they
want
to be told what to do. They're plebs. They're happiest that way. One thing, though: there can't be more than one leader.' He paused. âYou see, it's like the army.'
Hugo nodded vigorously.
âThere has to be a clear chain of command,' said Josh. âOne person has authority in a crisis situation: the buck stops with them, their word goes. That's how it should be. It can't be any other way. Because in a crisis situation if there's any hesitation, any questioning orders, people die.
âHere's the thing, mate: this group needs a leader. No offence, but I don't think you or anyone else out there is up to the job. So it's time for you to make a choice. You can carry on like you always do â keeping yourself apart, sneering at us
all from the sidelines. Or you can do the right thing for once, stand shoulder to shoulder with the rest of us, and
back me up a little
.' Josh smiled. âThat's all I'm asking.'
Ben frowned. âAnd all
I'm
asking,' he said, âis to have a go on the cameras. Why are you being such a knob about this?'
Josh's smile vanished. His lips tightened into a hard white line. âAll right,' he told Ben slowly. âI've given you your warning. Now all bets are off. From now on, I'm
watching you
.'
âReally,' said Ben.
âYou're a bad apple, Freeman,' said Josh. âBy crossing me, you put the whole group in danger. So, cross me again? You'll be history.'
âLet me get this straight,' said Ben. âYou're
not
going to let me use the cameras?'
âGet out of here,' said Josh. âBefore I lose my temper.'
âOh, we wouldn't want that,' said Ben, pushing past him. âKnob.'
Ben emerged from the monitor room with his face feeling hot and red. He was annoyed with Josh, sure, but he was also annoyed at himself. Why couldn't he keep his cool with him? Whenever Ben spoke to Josh he got a twisting feeling in his stomach and then all of a sudden the conversation would be
out of control. He hadn't meant to call Josh a knob. Well all right, he
had
meant to â Josh unquestionably was one, after all. But the sensible thing in the circumstances would've been to try reasoning with him some more, before reaching for the insults.
Yeah
, he told himself bitterly,
like that would've worked
.
They just hated each other. That was all there was to it. Or rather, he hated Josh; most of the time Josh probably didn't even think about him. Josh was too busy being top of the school heap, giving orders and having everybody do as he said.
He looked up. Despite being stuck together for the best part of two hours now, the group had spectacularly failed to mix. Robert and Ben himself were on the side of the room nearest the monitor-room door. The girls â Jasmine, Samantha, Lauren and the mousey-haired one, Ben couldn't think of her name for a moment . . .
Lisa
â were all sitting on chairs or the floor on the opposite side of the room. The room was divided down the middle, by both school and gender.
Deliberately not pausing to think about it too much â but feeling a flare of nerves anyway â Ben walked over and sat down on the floor next to Jasmine.
âHi,' he said.
Jasmine stopped prodding at the dead crawlers. Setting the notice board and its grisly contents down beside her, she looked at him.
âAnything happening on the screens?' she asked, all business.
âEr . . . no,' said Ben, surprised.
He thought of saying something about the argument with Josh and Hugo, but hesitated: he might have sounded like he was telling tales, and â annoyingly â there was something of Josh's words about âpulling together' in his thoughts too. Ben felt powerfully attracted to Jasmine: she seemed the only other person in this mad situation who was making any effort to find out what was really happening and, yes, she was gorgeous. But he wasn't quite ready to say what he thought of Josh just yet. Also, by the time he realized that this was what he was feeling, the moment had gone.
âOh well,' said Jasmine. âThen I guess we really do just have to sit and wait.'
âI'm Ben,' Ben blurted.
Jasmine gave him a quizzical look. âYes,' she said. âI know.'
âYou're Jasmine â right?' said Ben. But Jasmine's expression did not change. In fact, from the silence of the room around him Ben imagined that everybody else was looking at him now too. He hoped his face wasn't still red, but he reckoned it probably was.
âIt's just . . . nobody's talking,' he plunged on when Jasmine didn't answer.
Brilliant
, he thought.
What's that,
three obvious things in a row?
âWe're all just sitting here.'
Four
. âWe don't know how long for.'
Five
. âSo I thought, er, maybe we should try and get to know each other a bit.'
Oh, great, now it probably sounds like I'm trying to chat her up!
âJust to pass the time, yeah?' he added quickly. âSo, you know' â he shrugged â âhi.'
âHi yourself,' said Jasmine.
It was probably only because she thought Ben was a fool â how could she think otherwise, after the lamest introduction in world history? â but at least now she was smiling. She had a tiny dimple in her left cheek, and the tip of her nose had lifted a little: Jasmine's whole face moved when she smiled.
She has a nice smile
, Ben decided.
âKind of a weird way to meet,' he tried, brilliantly.
âYes, you could say that,' was the judicious reply.
âI mean, I don't think anything like this has ever happened to me before,' said Ben, grinning himself now. âYou?'
If Jasmine had a type of boy she liked â and she wasn't sure she did â Ben shouldn't have been it. He was white, for a start. That by itself wasn't necessarily a problem, but Jasmine had never thought about a white person in a romantic way before. Especially one with freckles, and floppy dark hair, and sparkling grey-blue eyes, and a cute grin, andâ
Now hold on a second
. She blinked.
âNo,' she said aloud, âI think I can safely say that nothing like this has ever happened to me, either.'
âWhen we get out of this,' said Ben, trying to make light of it, âwe can sell this story to the papers. We'll make a fortune.'