ТОП просматриваемых книг сайта:
Department 19 - 3 Book Collection. Will Hill
Читать онлайн.Название Department 19 - 3 Book Collection
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007562053
Автор произведения Will Hill
Жанр Детская проза
Издательство HarperCollins
It was a Blacklight uniform.
The jumpsuit was jet black in the fluorescent light of the changing room, the lightweight matt material reflecting nothing. Taped to the front of it was a handwritten note.
Put this on.
Jamie did so, stepping into the legs of the suit, sliding his arms down the sleeves, pulling the zip up to his throat, then fastening a flap over it. The uniform was incredibly light and cool; the material conformed to the contours of his body, and as he moved his arms and bent and dipped his shoulders, there was not a whisper of noise, of fabric folding or rubbing against itself. He walked excitedly across the room and stood in front of one of the long mirrors.
He barely recognised himself. Even with his grey socks poking out beneath the legs of the suit, he looked like a different person; a young man, rather than a teenage boy. His arms hung easily at his sides, his stance casual and well balanced. The awkward, jittery boy he had been, a boy who was always looking over his shoulder, was gone.
Good.
He turned away from the mirror and walked over to the metal cases sitting on the bench. One was the size of a laptop case, the other a lot bigger. He opened the smaller one first, and his eyes lit up when he saw its contents.
Lying in hollows of moulded black foam were a Glock 18 and a Heckler & Koch MP5, the same guns he had fired out in the Playground. He lifted the weapons out of their slots and held them in his hands. A calm chill spread down his spine, and a voice in the back of his head whispered to him.
They feel like they belong to you, don’t they? If you put them on, they do. Once you put them on, you never take them off. Not really.
Jamie knew this was a pivotal moment, the point at which the door to a life that did not involve guns and vampires might shut forever, at which the course of the rest of his life hung in the balance. And there was a part of him that wanted to put the guns down, wanted to walk out of this room in his own clothes. But he knew in his heart it was not an option; if he left his mother would die, he was sure of it, and he would gladly turn the rest of his life over to violence and darkness if it meant he could save her. So he lifted two clips from the foam slots that sat at the edge of the case, loaded the guns, and slipped them into the holsters on either side of his uniform.
No going back.
He lifted the layer of foam that had held the guns out of the case, sure he knew what was going to be lying beneath it. He was right. A metal stake with a black rubber handle lay next to a gleaming T-Bone and a black gas tank. He lifted them from the foam, slid the stake into the loop on his belt, but he did not attach the T-Bone; instead he opened the second case.
Springs pushed four metal wire grids up into a set of shelves half the width of the case, in which lay the components of the Blacklight body armour. Beside the shelves sat a jet-black helmet with a purple visor. Jamie looked at it, but did not reach out and touch it. The helmet seemed to radiate danger, and power, and for a moment he was scared of it.
Too late. Too late for that.
He knew that was true.
It was too late.
Jamie reached out and slid his hand over the smooth metal of the helmet, as if to prove he was not afraid of it, then closed both the cases, picked them up over the protests of his aching arms, and walked out of the changing room.
Terry was waiting for him in the Playground. The instructor looked Jamie up and down as he entered, a faint smile creeping into the corners of his mouth, then he extended his hand towards Jamie, who took it immediately. They shook.
“You did well,” Terry said. “Better than anyone could have expected, even me, and I’ve been doing this for a long time. Keep your eyes open, be aware of your surroundings, and remember what happened in the shed. You’ll be all right out there.”
Jamie thanked him. He stood where he was, waiting to see if there was more to be said, but Terry nodded towards the exit and said, ‘Dismissed.’ Jamie nodded, picked up the cases, turned sharply on his heels and headed for the door. He was about to place his hand on the handle when Terry spoke again.
“Don’t listen to what anyone says about your dad. You can’t change what he did, you can’t change what people think of him. But you can change what they think about you. So go and do it.”
Jamie turned back to reply, but Terry was already striding away down the Playground, his back to the boy. Jamie pulled open the door marked EXIT and walked through it.
Frankenstein was waiting on the other side. “There are some people who want to meet you,” he said. “Come with me.”
Frankenstein led Jamie up one level and through a winding series of corridors before stopping in front of a pair of double doors. Engraved on a brass plaque on the wall next to them were the words OFFICER’S MESS. Jamie read them, and frowned.
“I can’t go in there,” he said.
“You are my guest,” replied Frankenstein. “So yes, you can.”
He pushed open one of the doors and stepped through it. Jamie followed him after a second or two, looking around nervously.
A chorus of greetings filled the air as the door closed behind him. The source of the noise was a cluster of armchairs arranged in a loose arc around a vast flat-screen television. Frankenstein raised a hand in greeting, and the occupants of the chairs all rose and made towards them. Jamie had a moment to cast his eyes around the room before he was surrounded.
The mess was large, and almost square. Along one wall ran a beautiful wooden bar, behind which stood two immaculately dressed barmen, their faces masks of professional serenity, even as the room exploded into noise and movement around them. The middle of the room was given over to a number of low wooden tables, some round, some rectangular, around which more armchairs were gathered. Not many of the chairs were occupied, but the men and women in the ones that were had all turned around to see what the fuss was about. The tables were covered in backgammon sets, chess boards, unfinished card games, and glasses and bottles of every shape and size. At the far end of the mess was a long wooden dining table with at least twelve chairs down either side of it. In the wall beyond the table were two dark wooden doors, on which DINING 1 and DINING 2 were stencilled in flamboyant gold script. Jamie had never been in a gentlemen’s club, but he had an idea that he was looking at something very close to one now. The air was thick with cigarette and pipe smoke, and the heady scents of wine, port and brandy. Then Jamie was surrounded by noise and extended hands, and he focused on the men around him.
“Don’t smother the boy,” said Frankenstein, but he was smiling as he did so. “Jamie, let me introduce you to some of my colleagues. Thomas Morris.”
A man in his late twenties stepped forward and offered a hand, which Jamie accepted. Morris wore a Blacklight uniform, with an ancient-looking bowie knife hanging loosely from his belt. He grinned at Jamie, then clapped him hard on the back.
“Thought you were going to do it,” he said, excitedly. “I really did. No one ever has, not first time, but I thought you were. Can’t believe the girl from the shed got you.”
His smile widened, and Jamie felt one of his own spread across his face. The man’s excitement was contagious.
“Christian Gonzalez.”
Morris stepped aside and an extremely handsome Latino man replaced him. Jamie guessed that he was in his forties, but he could have been much younger; black hair fell casually across the dark skin of his forehead, and his eyes shone with vitality. They shook hands.
“It’s a pleasure to meet you,” Gonzalez said. “My