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going to have to wait.”

      “And why is that?”

      “Because I want to see the girl who tried to kill me yesterday. Right now.”

      Chapter 12

       A CRIMSON KINDNESS

      Frankenstein pressed H on the panel in the lift and they began to descend. The huge man looked straight ahead, his mouth set in a thin line, and Jamie knew he was angry.

      The lift doors opened on to a round chamber. In front of Jamie were a thick airlock door and an intercom panel. Apart from that, the walls were bare. The lift doors began to hiss shut behind him, and he whirled around. Frankenstein was still standing in the lift, looking at him. He lunged forward and stuck his hand in the narrowing gap.

      “What are you doing?” he shouted. “You can’t leave me down here on my own!”

      Frankenstein replied in a tight voice full of edges.

      “You wanted to come down here. I didn’t tell you to. Instead, I have to go and tell Admiral Seward that you’ll deign to come and see him when it suits you.”

      Jamie stared at the huge man. When the doors began to close again, he shoved a hand between them, but he said nothing. He just stared at Frankenstein, who returned his gaze.

      When the doors hissed for the third time, Jamie let them close. As Frankenstein’s face disappeared behind the sliding metal he thought he saw the monster’s face soften, and the wide lips part, as if he was going to say something. But then the doors clicked together, and he was gone.

      Jamie turned away from the lift and examined the intercom panel. There was a small button at the bottom of the metal rectangle, and he pressed it and waited. He was about to press it again when a voice suddenly emanated from the intercom, making him jump.

      “Code in.”

      Jamie leant towards the intercom and spoke into the metal grid.

      “I don’t know what that means,” he said, and was embarrassed by the tremor in his voice.

      “State your name.”

      “Jamie Carpenter.”

      There was a long pause.

      “Proceed,” the voice said, eventually, and the huge airlock door unlocked with a rush of air.

      Jamie took the handle in his hand, braced himself for the weight of the huge structure and pulled. The door slid open smoothly, and he stumbled backwards, gripping the handle to stop himself falling. The door was as light as a feather.

      There must be some sort of counter-balance. I bet you couldn’t open it with dynamite if it was still locked.

      He stepped through the door and into a white room not much bigger than a decent-sized cupboard. There was a second door opposite the one he had just come through, which he pulled shut behind him, and waited for the second set of locks to disengage.

      Nothing happened.

      Panic jumped from nowhere and settled in Jamie’s throat. He was locked in, trapped in this tiny space, an unknowable distance beneath the ground. Sweat broke out on his forehead and suddenly it seemed that the walls were closer than they had been when he walked in. He put his hands out and touched the walls with his fingertips, waiting for the sensation of movement, but there was none.

      Then the lights went out, and he clamped his teeth together so he didn’t scream.

      A second later he was bathed in purple ultraviolet light, as small hatches in the walls opened and flooded the tiny chamber with a rushing white gas.

      Then it was over, as quickly as it had begun. The lights came back on, and the second door clunked open. Jamie threw himself against it, pushing it open with his shoulder, spilling out of the – coffin, it was like being in a coffin – room.

      He gripped his knees with his hands, doubled over, breathing hard. When the panic had subsided he stood up and looked around. He was in a long, narrow corridor, brightly lit by square fluorescent lights set flush into the ceiling. To his right was a flat white wall, to his left was a small office behind thick transparent plastic. Ten metres down the corridor he could see square floor-to-ceiling holes that had to be the cells, running in parallel down the length of the cellblock. A white line was painted on to the floor on each side, a metre in front of the cells.

      He turned to the office. Behind the plastic a soldier, wearing the now familiar all-black uniform, sat at a metal desk. He was looking at Jamie with a strange expression on his face, an uncomfortable mix of anger and pity. Jamie supposed the latter was as a result of what had happened to his dad; he did not know what he had done to elicit the former. But when the man spoke, his voice carried no hint of conflict, just the clipped vowels and tight consonants of anger.

      “You here to see the new one?” he asked.

      Jamie nodded.

      “She’s at the end on the left.”

      Jamie thanked the man and turned towards the cells, but the guard spoke again.

      “I’m not finished,” he said. “There are rules down here, no matter what your name is. Understand?”

      Jamie turned back to the office, his face flushing red with anger. The guard saw this, and smirked.

      “Oh, you’ve heard of rules, have you?” he said. “Bet you learnt about them from your dad. That right?”

      “What’s your problem?” snapped Jamie, and the guard flushed a deep crimson. He lifted himself halfway out of his seat, his eyes fixed on Jamie’s, then appeared to think better of it, and sat back into the chair.

      “Don’t pass them anything, don’t tell them anything about yourself, don’t step across the white line,” he said. “Press the alarm next to her cell if there’s trouble. If you’re lucky, someone might come.”

      With that, he looked away.

      Jamie walked past the office and between the first two cells. They were empty, but a surge of panic shot through him when he examined the one to his left. The entire front wall of the cell was open; no bars, no glass, nothing. He looked down the corridor and saw that all the cells appeared to be the same. He stepped back to the plastic-fronted office and the guard spoke immediately, without looking up.

      “It’s ultraviolet light,” he said, his voice utterly disinterested. “We can pass through it, they can’t.”

      “Why not?” Jamie asked.

      The guard raised his head and looked at Jamie.

      “Because they’ll burn into a little pile of ash if they do. Their cells are vulnerable to UV light. It’s why they can’t go out in the sun.”

      He lowered his head again, and waved a hand dismissively. Jamie clenched his fists, bit his tongue and walked back down the corridor.

      The first two cells on either side were empty, but the third on the right was occupied. A middle-aged man, neatly dressed in a dark brown suit, sat in a plastic chair at the rear of the cell, reading a thick paperback book. He looked up as Jamie passed, but said nothing.

      As he made his way down the cellblock he became aware of a distant noise. It sounded like the howls mating foxes made in the fields behind his house, an ungodly shriek, high-pitched and ugly. As Jamie walked past empty cell after empty cell, he realised it was getting louder, and by the time he stepped in front of the last cell on the left, it was almost deafening.

      The girl who had attacked him in the park, and then again in the hangar, was crawling back and forth across the ceiling of her cell, like a horribly bloated fly. She was almost unrecognisable from the girl he had met the previous day; her eyes gleamed a terrible red, her clothes were torn, and she was caked in blood that had dried to an even brown crust. Her head was thrown back, the muscles in her neck standing out like thick strands of rope, and the guttural howling that was issuing from her snarling

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