Just in Case

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Authors: Meg Rosoff

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PENGUIN BOOKS

Just in Case

Praise for
How I Live Now

‘A crunchily perfect knock-out of a debut novel’ –
Guardian

‘This is a powerful novel: timeless and luminous’ –
Observer

‘That rare, rare thing, a first novel with a sustained, magical and utterly faultless voice’ – Mark Haddon, author of
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

‘Unforgettable… Rosoff achieves a remarkable feat’ –
Sunday Times

‘Gripping and powerful’ –
Independent

‘Intense and startling… heartbreakingly romantic’ –
The Times

‘Readers won’t just read this book, they will let it possess them’ –
Sunday Telegraph

‘Fresh and original’ –
Time Out

‘It really stuck with me. I dreamt about it afterwards’ –
Sunday Express

Books by Meg Rosoff

HOW I LIVE NOW

JUST IN CASE

MEG ROSOFF

Just in Case

 

PENGUIN BOOKS

PENGUIN BOOKS

Published by the Penguin Group
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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

penguin.com

First published in Penguin Books 2006
Published in this edition 2007
5

Text copyright © Meg Rosoff, 2006
All rights reserved

The moral right of the author has been asserted

Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN:978-0-14-192490-8

For Paul

1

The view is fine up here. I can look out across the world and see everything.

For instance I can see a fifteen-year-old boy and his brother.

2

David Case’s baby brother had recently learned to walk but he wasn’t what you’d call an expert. He toddled past his brother to the large open window of the older boy’s room. There, with a great deal of effort, he pulled himself on to the window sill, scrunched up like a caterpillar, pushed into a crouch and stood, teetering precariously, his gaze fixed solemnly on the church tower a quarter-mile away.

He tipped forward slightly towards the void, just as a large black bird swooped past. It paused and turned an intelligent red eye to meet the child’s.

‘Why not fly?’ suggested the bird, and the boy’s eyes widened in delight.

Below them on the street, a greyhound stood motionless, his elegant pale head turned in the direction of the incipient catastrophe. Calmly the dog shifted the angle of his muzzle, creating an invisible guy line that eased the child back an inch or two towards equilibrium. Safer now, but seduced by the fact that a bird had spoken to him, the boy threw out his arms and thought, Yes! Fly!

David did not hear his brother think ‘fly’. Something else made him look up. A voice. A finger on his shoulder. The brush of lips against his ear.

So that’s where we start: one boy on the verge of death. Another on the verge of something rather more complicated.

In the instant of looking up, David took the measure of the situation, shouted ‘
Charlie!’
and lunged across the room. He grabbed the child by the cape of his Batman pyjamas, wrapped his arms around him with enough force to flatten his ribs, and sank to the floor, squashing the boy’s face into the safe hollow beneath his chin.

Charlie squeaked with outrage, but David barely heard. Panting, he unpinned him, gripping the child at arm’s length.

‘What were you doing?’ He was shouting. ‘What on earth do you think you were doing?’

Well, said Charlie, I was bored just playing with my toys and you weren’t paying attention to me so I thought I would get a better look at the world. I climbed up on the window which wasn’t easy and once I managed to do that I felt strange and happy with nothing but sky all around me and all of a sudden a bird flew past and looked at me and said I could fly and a bird hasn’t ever talked to me before and I figured a bird would know what he was talking about when it came to flying so I thought he must be right.
Oh and there was also a pretty grey dog on the pavement who looked up and pointed at me with his nose so I didn’t fall and just when I was about to leap out and soar through the air you grabbed me and hurt me a lot which made me very cross and I didn’t get a chance to fly even though I’m sure I could have.

The little boy explained all this slowly and carefully, so as not to be misunderstood.

‘Bir-dee fly,’ were the words that came out of his mouth.

David turned away, heart pounding. It was useless trying to communicate with a one-year-old. Even if his brother had possessed the vocabulary, he couldn’t have answered David’s question. Charlie did what he did because he was a dumb kid, too dumb to realize that birds don’t talk and kids can’t fly.

My god, David thought. If I’d been two seconds slower he’d be dead. My brother would be dead but
I’d
be the one shattered, crushed, destroyed by guilt and blame and everyone everywhere for the rest of my life whispering,
He’s that kid who killed his brother.

Two seconds. Just two seconds were all that stood between normal, everyday life and utter, total catastrophe.

He sat down hard, mind spinning. Why had this never occurred to him? He could fall down a manhole, collapse from a stroke. A car crash could sever his spinal cord. He could catch bird flu. A tree could fall on him. There were
comets. Killer bees. Foreign armies. Floods. Serial killers. There was buried nuclear waste. Ethnic cleansing. Alien invasion.

A plane crash.

Suddenly, everywhere he looked he saw catastrophe, bloodshed, the demise of the planet, the ruin of the human race, not to mention (to pinpoint the exact source of his anxiety) possible pain and suffering to himself.

Who could have thought up a scenario this bleak?

Whoever (whatever) it was, he could feel the dark malevolence of it settling in, making itself at home like some vicious bird of prey, its sharp claws sunk deep into the quivering grey jelly of his terrified brain. He pulled his brother close, tucking him in against his body, pressed his lips to the child’s face.

What if…?

He became enmired in what if. The weight of it wrapped itself around his ankles and dragged him under.

3

A year earlier, David’s father had woken him with a shout.

‘David, your mother’s home! Aren’t you interested in seeing the baby?’

Not really, David thought, burying his head in his pillow. I know what a baby looks like.

But then they were in his room, grinning and making inane noises in the direction of a small, serene-looking creature with jet-black eyes. David sat up with a groan and peered at his new brother. OK, seen him, he thought.

‘Of course he can’t see
you
yet.’ His father, superior as ever. ‘Babies can’t focus properly for weeks.’

David was about to go back to sleep when he noticed the new baby gazing at him with a peculiar expression of calm authority.

I’m Charlie, said the new baby’s eyes, as clearly as if he had spoken the words out loud. Who are you?

David stared.

His brother repeated the question slowly, politely, as if
to a person of limited intelligence.
Who, exactly, are you?

David frowned.

The baby inclined his head, his face registering something that might have been pity. Such a simple question, he thought. But if his brother knew the answer, he gave no sign.

This disturbed Charlie. Over the next few months, he tried approaching his parents for answers, but his father was always at work and his mother seemed strangely ill-informed on the subject of her older son. ‘He’s usually on time,’ she would comment brightly, or, ‘I wish he’d tidy his room more.’ But nothing about
who he was.
And when she caught Charlie staring intently at David, she merely thought, How sweet. They’re bonding.

But they weren’t bonding. Charlie was comparing the David he knew with the Davids he saw displayed around the house in family pictures. The younger Davids looked cheerful and serene; they held books or bikes or ice creams and gazed at the camera with expressions of trust. The younger Davids kicked balls, swung from trees, blew out the candles on birthday cakes. They had clear edges and cloudless eyes.

But the David that Charlie knew now was wavery and fizzy with nerves. The new David reminded Charlie of a birthday card he’d seen where the picture of a clown shifted gradually into the picture of a tightrope walker, depending on how you tilted it. Exactly when this transformation had begun, the child couldn’t say. According to the photos, his
brother’s outline had begun to blur sometime between playing football at thirteen and losing his status as only child the following year.

Charlie had spent a good deal of his short life worrying about his older brother. Now he paused in the middle of playing Monkey Rides in a Car with Donkey to gather his thoughts. He saw that his recent attempt to fly had been a mistake. It seemed to have nudged his brother past some invisible tipping point, and this filled him with remorse. Charlie wanted to make amends, to offer advice on how David could regain his footing. But he couldn’t get his brother to listen.

Or perhaps he
was
listening, but somehow lacked the capacity to understand. This worried Charlie most of all.

4

Someone other than David Case might have experienced the near-catastrophe of that summer day and imagined he’d had a lucky escape.

Someone else in the dull suburban town of Luton might have thought that such things happen; might have taken it as a warning that all humans are fallible, that a certain degree of vigilance is required to avoid life’s many potential tragedies. Someone else might even have congratulated himself on saving his brother’s life.

But David Case was not someone else. Months of half-formed worries and loosely framed paranoid fantasies clicked into place that afternoon with the finality of a proclamation. In a single instant, the vague confusion of images resolved into certainty.

He was doomed.

He lay in bed the following morning, replaying the scene in his head. He’d avoided tragedy this time, yes, but next time the arrow (the bullet, the boulder, the bomb) would find its mark. He could see the horrible scenario spooling
out with the deceptive simplicity of a cartoon: Fate wandering idly past, checking his watch, feigning indifference – and then
WHAMMO!

Pulling on his clothes, he felt eyes watching him. Pouring breakfast cereal into a bowl, he saw his life crashing down in smoking ruins.

Oh god, he thought, brushing his teeth. I have to hide. No, not hide. Mutate. Become unrecognizable.

He sat on his bed, bit his nails, took inventory. Fifteen years old, five foot nine inches tall, sloping shoulders, shuffling gait, reasonably polite, medium-brown English hair, crooked teeth, medium-fair English complexion.

None of these qualities would protect him from disaster. His only chance was to remake his life one step at a time, starting with his name. And if he managed to be different enough, well, perhaps fate would forget about David Case and pass on to the next pathetic victim. Hound
him
to death.

He stepped out his front door and off the kerb (causing a cyclist to swerve in front of a delivery van) and changed his name to Justin. Justin sounded suave, coolly ironic, hardbodied, rigorously intelligent. More competent than David. Less vulnerable. Justin Case was the sort of character who could cope with danger.

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