The Tornado Chasers (17 page)

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Authors: Ross Montgomery

BOOK: The Tornado Chasers
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‘It was a long time ago,’ he says. He looks me up and down. ‘I suppose they’d be about your age by now.’

He pauses for a moment, waiting for a response from me.

‘I took the Warden job after they died. I promised myself I would never let any children come to any harm, ever again. That I would dedicate my life to protecting them. So I know what it’s like to cope with losing a child. That’s how the parents of your friends feel right now, 409. Don’t
they
deserve to know what happened?’

I glare at the man sat in front of me. It is a cruel trick for him to play. He leans forward.

‘Don’t they?’

I nod. Of course they do. I hate him right then, more than anything.

Leave me alone,
I scream at him inside my head.
Get away from me. You liar.

‘Then why won’t you tell us what happened?’

I look out the window again. It’s just past midday, and the sun is beating off the ripples of the valley and making the grass and treetops shine, turning the whole world green. I guess he keeps the window here for a reason.

‘I need you to answer me, 409.’

I lick my lips, and clear my throat.

‘I … I don’t know how,’ I say weakly.

My voice comes out hoarse and cracked. It’s become barely a whisper over the last year. This is because I never speak. When I have to, my voice doesn’t even sound like mine any more. It’s good. I like it that way.

The Warden looks at his folder again.

‘It says here you were told you could write it down,’ said the Warden. ‘Only the guard here tells me you haven’t written anything in six months. Is that true?’

I hide my eyes and quickly nod. It is a lie, of course. But no one knows that. I can’t ever let them know. The Warden eyes me critically.

‘It’s almost like you don’t want to leave,’ he says quietly.

He keeps his gaze fixed on me, his face expressionless.
The idea suddenly occurs to me that the Warden can see through me, that he can see the truth, that he already knows what happened, what a coward I’ve been. I stare back at him, trying to make myself a blank page he cannot read.

The Warden waits for me to talk. I say nothing. He sighs, and adjusts himself on his chair.

‘I think we need to try another approach,’ he says.

He nods to the guard behind me. I hear him walk across the room, and unlock the door, and leave. It is now just me and the Warden. I sit, gazing calmly forward, but my heart is spasming in my chest. I keep my face empty. I can’t let him see that I’m frightened.

The Warden stands up. He walks around the desk to the other side, and stands beside me. He looks down at me. I am trying to stop myself from trembling. All I can think about is him in the Caves, holding the baton over our heads. He’s as close to me now as he was then. He leans over, even closer.

‘Callum,’ he says, ‘we need to talk about what happened in the Caves.’

And that’s too much. My name, the memory of it, and now him right there beside me, just like that day. I suddenly leap to my feet, throwing the chair back behind me.

‘You … you liar!’
I cry.

My voice is there, right in front of me, my old voice. I’ve learned to hide it over the last few months but I can’t hide it now. The Warden looks at me in shock.

‘Callum, I don’t …’

‘I stayed behind in school for a year!’ I spit.
‘A whole year.
And you know why?’ I stare at him. ‘Go on, you know everything else, don’t you?’

I have to look at the reflection in his glasses, at myself as I shout. It makes me even angrier. I clench my teeth.


Bears
,’ I shout. ‘
Bears!
All those
stupid
stories about
bears!
Once I left Miss Pewlish’s class and went up a year, I wasn’t going to get a Home-Time Partner any more, was I? And you know what
that
means? Walking home on your own. I couldn’t do it! Everyone thought it was because I was stupid, but I wasn’t stupid.
I wasn’t stupid!’

My face burns with the humiliation of it. I clench my fists and grit my teeth and try to drive it down again, the anger and the fear and the sadness inside me, but it’s no good. I can’t now.

‘All those stories about children being eaten … I really believed them! So I made sure I’d always have a Home-Time Partner, didn’t I? Because I couldn’t be left on my own. I tried to hide it but I couldn’t. I was … I was
frightened
!’

I turn to him. He stands, his face blank.

‘That’s why we did it!’ I cry. ‘The whole thing! Leaving the village, chasing the tornado … the whole point was to prove that we weren’t afraid – but there wasn’t even anything to be afraid of! It was all lies!’ I shove him. ‘Go on, then, talk! It’s your turn!
What could you possibly have to say to me that you haven’t already said?

I fall silent. The Warden stares at me.

‘I wanted to apologise to you,’ he says. ‘I wanted to tell you that … that I’m sorry.’

The Warden swallows.

‘For everything I said to you that day,’ he explains. ‘To you and your friends. And the fact I tried to … I made a mistake. I didn’t do it right. I regret it, hugely. If I
had
done better, I don’t know, maybe … maybe things would have been different. Maybe your friends would still be here.’ He pauses. ‘I’m so sorry.’

He finishes. We wait in silence and look at each other. Something has changed, in the space of a few sentences. We’re more equal. Maybe it’s the light in the office, or my memory, but I notice that the Warden does look different now. From this close, I can see that his hair has grown out a little over the last year. He is, in fact, slightly balding. Maybe that’s why he shaves his head. He looks at me, straight on.

‘You need to explain what happened, Callum,’ he says. ‘If you don’t, you’ll be here for the rest of your life.’

I shake my head. ‘But I … I can’t.’

‘Why not?’

I clear my throat. It hurts. I haven’t spoken this much in a long time.

‘I … I did try to explain,’ I say. ‘Back when they first questioned me. I really did. But I – I couldn’t stand it. I had to try and explain why I did all these things I did, why I said things … and most of the time I didn’t even know why myself. I look back at what I did, and I hate myself for it.’

The Warden looks at me. He’s confused.

‘What do you mean, what you did?’

I shuffle slightly. ‘I don’t want to talk about it.’

The Warden suddenly steps forward. He looks genuinely concerned.

‘Callum – you know you didn’t do anything wrong, don’t you?’

It’s too much. The memories rise up inside me, everything that I’ve worked so hard not to think about. I push myself backwards.

‘I want to go now,’ I say.

I push myself backwards but I’m in a corner. There’s
nowhere to go. The Warden steps towards me.

‘Callum, I’m serious,’ he says. ‘You didn’t do anything wrong. You can’t punish yourself like this. Why don’t you give yourself a chance and …’

‘Because I don’t want to!’ I shout. ‘Leave me alone! Let me go!’

The memories are rising up. The Warden doesn’t stop.

‘Why are you so frightened, Callum?’ he says. ‘Why can’t you tell us what happened, and start over again?’

‘Because I don’t deserve it!’

It’s coming out of me now and I’m terrified, I can’t stop it. The Warden steps forward.

‘Why don’t you deserve it, Callum?’

‘Because of what I did!’
I cry, slamming my hands against the wall behind me. I’m trying to stop it coming out but the Warden keeps stepping towards me. He’s close to me now. There’s nowhere I can go.

‘Callum,’ he says, slowly, calmly. ‘What could you possibly have done that deserves
this?

I leap at him, my chest bursting, and out it comes.


I left them!

The Warden stands, and watches me. I hang my head and hold it in my hands.


I left them.
I just left them there. My friends. My first
ever friends. You hear me? I made them go it alone. I … I didn’t even say goodbye!’

The memory arrives. And at once, I see it. The moment in the Caves when I took Owen’s hand and he let me. And I think about every single time I pushed him into the nettles.

‘They put up with me all that time,’ I say, shaking. ‘They put up with me. After everything I said to them and everything I did to them. They didn’t laugh at me or call me a coward. Like I would have done to them. They … they let me go.’

It was that moment, that exact moment when Owen said I could go, that I knew I had never been a Tornado Chaser, not a real one, not like him. Because if I had been one – a true one down in my heart – I would have thanked him, I would have said sorry, I would have told him how much his friendship had meant to me. But I didn’t do any of those things.

‘They knew the truth,’ I say. ‘That I couldn’t stand up to it, like they could. And they were right. I wasn’t a Tornado Chaser. I was just … a coward.’

The Warden steps forward again.

‘You were not a coward, Callum,’ he says. ‘You were frightened. And that is not the same thing as being a coward. Everyone is frightened.’

I shake my head. ‘No they’re not. Not like me. Not all the time.’

The Warden shrugs. ‘No, not all the time. But you can’t
never
be frightened, Callum. That’s not bravery. Bravery is knowing how frightened you are of something, and still doing it anyway.’

As he says it, something suddenly clicks in me. I glare at him.

‘That’s rich, coming from you!’ I spit at him. ‘Your job is
lying
to children. Scaring them! Getting them to do what you want! How do you think I felt, standing there in the Caves, thinking a bear was coming towards me? I thought I was going to die! And then, when we tried to escape … you
attacked us
!’

The room is silent suddenly. This time, the Warden does not move. He looks at me.

‘I didn’t mean to do it,’ he says. ‘I wasn’t trying to scare you. I didn’t want to hurt you. I wasn’t even angry.’

‘Then why did you do it?’ I shout.

He pauses for a moment. And then slowly, he reaches up, and takes off his glasses.

‘I did it because I thought that you’d get away from me,’ he says. ‘Because I thought everything that had happened to me would happen again. Because I thought that I’d fail. That I’d lose you.’

I see his eyes properly for the first time. They are old and green and marked with lines of pain, lines that show what he has been through. They are the kindest and gentlest eyes I have ever seen. And I finally understand why he has to wear glasses.

‘Because I was frightened,’ he says quietly.

The door suddenly opens behind me, and I spin round. The guard has walked back in.

‘Everything OK in here, sir?’ he asks.

I turn back to the Warden. His face is blank once more, a shop-front mannequin. He has put his glasses back on. All I can see is myself reflected in them.

But I’m shocked at what I see. I’m different to the boy that walked in. Something has changed. The Warden clears his throat, and for a second I’m certain he’s shaking.

‘Get 409 as much paper as he wants,’ he says. ‘He has a lot of writing to do.’

The guard closes my cell door behind me.

Scrape
.

A stack of paper has been pushed under the doorway behind me. It is quickly followed by a pencil.

I look out the window of my cell. The view from here is not like the one in the Warden’s office. The fields outside my window are landfill, stretching right on towards the horizon. The people of Barrow ship their rubbish out here, where they can’t see it, and it piles up and surrounds the valley like an ocean. Birds are swooping down from the clouds, picking at it in great shifting flocks, right up the hills.

I push my head against the bars and look down. There, just beneath my window, lies an enormous mound of scrunched-up paper balls. All of them are mine, each one a different ending that I started, and abandoned, and thrown away. I found the paper any way I could – ripped it out of books, stole it from other cells, made my handwriting tiny and cramped and spidery to fit as much possible onto the page. Anything to get more than one sheet a week. There must be hundreds of them down there. There are so many that the wind has formed them into a drift against the wall.

The wind.

I look out over the valley. The sun is beginning to set now, dipping behind the hills. I can see the stormtraps along the valley top, blinking in the dusk. A steady wind is blowing, growing stronger, blowing into my
room. It lifts the sheets of paper off the floor beside me, flinging them around the cell like a tornado, taking me to places beyond the mountains.

This notepaper is kindly provided for the inmates of
THE COUNTY DETENTION CENTRE
Use one sheet per week
No scribbling

 

Dear Warden,

Congratulations! You’ve finally found my last letter. I knew you would.

You certainly would have had to work hard to look through every single scrunched-up paper ball in the pile outside my cell window. You may find some pages in there about the day of our meeting, and many different endings that I wrote for my story. There are quite a lot of them now. Thousands, in fact. You can do whatever you want with them – I don’t have a use for them any more. Choose whichever you think is best.

I’d appreciate it if you kept going through the pile. Somewhere in there, you’ll find a letter I have written to the people of Barrow. It’s important that it gets to them. It also explains where I’ve gone to – if you haven’t already worked that out for yourself by now. I’m sure you have.

Don’t bother sending any search parties after me. It will be too late. I know where I’m going now, and I know why I want to do it. It feels good to say that, and to mean it, for the first time ever. I hope one day you’ll know what I mean.

Yours s

Thank you.

Dear parents and teachers of Barrow,

As I write this I’m standing on the roof of the County Detention Centre, looking out over the valley around me. Despite all the rubbish that you send here, it can look very beautiful. Now is a very good example. A new tornado landed last night. In the distance I can see the flickering stormtraps along the hilltops, and hear their distant warning cry. Right now, you will all be tucked in safely at home, waiting for the storm to pass. But not me.

In a moment, I will scrunch this letter up into a ball and throw it off the roof, just as I have thrown out many other pages before it. It will land with the thousands of others that are piled up beneath my cell window. The pile is pretty high now. There are so many that they will easily cushion my fall when I jump off. From there, it is a simple two-day walk across the valley to the Great North
Caves. I know I will get there before the tornado does. And then, I will meet it head-on.

I decided a long time ago that I was going to do this. I decided that I was going to go against everything that I was brought up to believe – that living in fear is better than standing up against what frightens you. It is a lesson that you taught me well, Barrow – one that you still teach your children.

I’m afraid now. I’m afraid of what lies ahead of me, but unlike you I’m not going to let it stop me. The world is a frightening place, and I don’t want to run from it any longer. I’ve run away from a lot of things. I’ve had enough. I want to see what happens when I stop.

And I want to see my friends again too, more than anything. I want to see where they went.
I hope this letter will make you change
your minds about what you’ve done. Perhaps you might abandon Barrow altogether and start showing your children how to live with fear rather than how to hide from it. But I think it’s much too late for that now. I don’t think you’ll even listen.

But your children might.

Yours sincerely,

INM

CALL
UM BRENNER

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