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on an essay for his English literature class, a comparison of the speeches by Brutus and Mark Antony in Julius Caesar, typing quickly into his aging laptop, when something thundered out of the sky and crashed into the small garden behind the terraced house he shared with his sister and his parents, throwing dirt and brown grass into the evening air.

      Downstairs he heard his mother shriek and his father slur at her to shut up. In the bedroom next door his little sister Laura started to cry, a high wail full of confusion and determination.

      Matt saved his work and got up from his desk. He was small for his sixteen years, and skinny, his brown hair flopping across his high forehead and resting against the tops of his glasses. His face was pale and close to feminine, his features fine and soft around the edges, as though he were slightly out of focus. He was wearing his favourite crimson Harvard T-shirt and dark brown cords, and he slid his feet into a pair of navy Vans before walking quickly across the small landing and into his sister’s bedroom.

      Laura was lying in her cot, her face a deep, outraged red, her eyes squeezed shut, her mouth a perfect circle. Matt reached into the crib and picked her up, resting her against his shoulder and quietly shushing her, bouncing her gently in his arms. There was a glorious moment’s silence as she took a deep breath, then the cries began again. Matt crossed the tiny room, pulled the door open and headed downstairs.

      In the kitchen at the back of the house his mother was frantic. She was wearing her cream dressing gown and a pair of pale blue slippers and flitting back and forth beneath the two windows above the sink, peering into the dark garden and telling her husband over and over to call the police. Greg Browning stood unsteadily in the middle of the room, one hand pressed against his forehead, a can of lager in the other. He looked round as Matt walked into the kitchen.

      “Shut your sister up, would you?” he grunted. “She’s giving me a headache.” Then he turned back to his wife. “Will you stop flapping and take the damn baby?” he said, his voice starting to rise.

      Matt’s mother quickly took Laura from Matt and sat down with her at the table.

      “Get the phone for your mother.”

      Matt lifted the phone from its cradle on the wall next to the door and passed it to his mum. She took it with a confused look on her face.

      “Now you can call the police while me and Matt go and take a look in the garden.”

      “No, Greg, you shouldn’t…”

      “Shouldn’t?”

      Matt’s mother swallowed hard.

      “I mean, don’t go out there. Please?”

      “Just shut the hell up, OK, Lynne? Matt, let’s go.”

      Greg Browning opened the door to the back garden and stopped in the doorway, listening. Matt walked over and stood behind him, looking over his father’s shoulder into the darkening sky.

      The garden was silent; nothing moved in the cool evening air.

      Matt’s father took a torch from the shelf beside the back door, turned it on and stepped out on to the narrow strip of patio that ran below the kitchen windows. Matt followed, scanning the dark garden for whatever had fallen past his window. Behind him in the kitchen he could hear his mother trying to explain what had happened to the police.

      His dad shone the torch in a wide arc across the flowerbeds that bordered the narrow strip of lawn. At the edge of the grass the beam picked out a flash of white.

      “Over there,” said Matt. “In the flowerbed.”

      “Stay here.”

      Matt stood on the patio as his father walked slowly across the threadbare lawn. He inhaled sharply as he reached the edge of the grass.

      “What is it?” Matt asked.

      No reply. His father just kept staring down into the dark flowerbed.

      “Dad? What is it?”

      Finally, his father looked round at him. His eyes were wide.

      “It’s a girl,” he said, eventually. “It’s a teenage girl.”

      “What?”

      “Come and look.”

      Matt walked across the lawn and looked down into the weed-strewn flowerbed.

      The girl was lying on her back in the dirt, half buried by the force of her landing. Her pale face was smeared with blood, and her eyes and mouth were grotesquely swollen. Black hair fanned out around her head like a dark halo, matted with mud and clumped together in bloody strands. Her left arm was obviously broken, her forearm joining her elbow at an unnatural right angle. Her light grey shirt was soaked black with blood, and Matt realised with horror that there was a wide hole in her stomach, along the line of her abdomen. He saw glistening red and purple, and looked away.

      “It looks like someone tried to gut her,” his father said quietly.

      “What is it, Greg?” shouted Matt’s mother from the kitchen doorway. “What’s happening?”

      “Shut up, Lynne,” Greg Browning replied automatically, but his voice was low, and for once he didn’t sound angry.

      He sounds scared, thought Matt, and crouched down beside the girl. Despite the damage to her face, she was beautiful, her skin so pale it was almost translucent, her lips a dark, inviting red.

      Behind him his father was muttering to himself, looking from the sky to the ground and back again, searching for an explanation for why this girl had fallen into their garden.

      Matt placed his hand on the cool skin of her neck, checking for a pulse, knowing he wouldn’t find one.

      Who did this to you? he wondered.

      The girl opened her swollen right eye and looked straight at Matt. He screamed.

      “She’s alive!” he yelled.

      “Don’t be stupid,” shouted Greg Browning. “She’s—”

      The girl coughed, a deep spluttering rattle that sent new streams of blood running down her chin. She turned her head towards Matt and said something he couldn’t make out.

      “My God,” said Matt’s father.

      Matt pushed himself up off the grass and slowly approached his father’s side. He looked down at the stricken girl, who was moving her head slowly from side to side, her lips curled back in a grimace of pain.

      “We have to do something, Dad,” said Matt. “We can’t leave her like this.”

      His father turned on him, his face full of anger.

      “What do you want me to do?” he shouted. “The police are on their way, they can deal with it. We shouldn’t even touch her.”

      “But Dad—”

      Greg Browning’s face twisted with rage and he raised a fist and took a step towards his son. Matt cried out, covering his face with his forearms and turning away.

      “You’ll be quiet if you know what’s good for you,” his dad grunted, lowering the fist.

      Matt looked at his father, his cheeks flushed red with shame and impotence, his brain alive with hatred. He opened his mouth to say something, anything, when a deafening roar filled the evening air and a squat black helicopter appeared over the trees that stood at the bottom of their suburban garden.

      Matt covered his face and did his best to remain upright as the helicopter’s rotors churned the dust and dirt of the garden. He could see his dad shouting but could hear nothing over the thunder of the engines and the shriek of the wind. He craned his neck, his hands shielding his eyes, and watched the helicopter disappear over the roof of their house.

      Matt turned and raced towards the house, past his mother who was standing motionless at the back door, through the kitchen and the narrow corridor

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