Authors: V M Jones
There was a long, terrible silence. They were all looking at me, waiting for me to do something ⦠say something.
âIt ⦠it's not how it looks,' I stammered at last. My voice sounded shaky and small.
âOh, really, Adam? And how does it
look
?'
âIt looks ⦠you're both thinking â¦' Even as I said the words, I knew it was useless. âYou're thinking I copied Weevil â William, I mean. But I didn't. It was the other way round. He copied me.'
Miss McCracken and Mrs Sharp exchanged a glance. âOh, come now, Adam,' said Mrs Sharp, in the kind of voice you'd use to talk to a baby. âDon't insult our intelligence. Here we have a superior piece of work, and a highly gifted straight-A student. On the other hand we have a boy who, frankly, has been nothing but trouble since he joined the school ⦠a boy who can barely write his own name. Do you seriously expect us to believe for one moment this is
your
work â that
William
copied it from
you
? That is ridiculous. William: do you have anything to say?'
âNot really, Mrs Sharp,' said Weevil, sliding me a sidelong, injured glance. âJust that â well, Adam, I'm really disappointed. After I tried to be friends wiff you, and everyfing.'
âMiss McCracken?'
âOh, Adam,' said Miss McCracken wearily. âDo you know, sometimes I really do come close to giving up on you. And you know what discourages me most? You never even bother to try.'
Miss McCracken and Weevil left soon after â but not before a shiny gold principal's award had been stuck onto the front of Weevil's project, and Mrs Sharp had torn mine in half and dropped it into the bin.
I had to stay on and listen while Mrs Sharp phoned Highgate and told Matron the whole story. While they discussed whether I should be suspended for the rest of the term, and agreed a more appropriate punishment would be a fail in history, and to have all my computer privileges suspended until further notice. Words like
sheer audacity
and
abuse of trust
flew through the air like arrows, but I was way past the stage where they could hurt me. I felt as numb as if I'd been turned to concrete.
After school, I dragged myself up the hill back to Highgate. Dumped my lunch box on the tottering pile on the kitchen servery â and the whole lot came crashing down. Numbly, I bent and started picking them up. âLet me take care of that, Adam,' said Cookie from the kitchen.
She looked up from peeling potatoes, her face heavy with sympathy. âYou're to pop through and see
Her,
as soon as you get in. Right away, she said. Best hurry, dear, the state she's in.'
I knocked on Matron's office door, the wood sounding hollow under my knuckles.
Matron was at her desk. She'd had her hair done, I noticed automatically â it sat in tight grey rolls, like rows of steel tubing arranged on her head. Her eyes were like bullets. For a long moment, she said nothing.
Before, I would have shuffled my feet and dropped my eyes. But now I met her gaze levelly. I hadn't done anything wrong, and nothing Matron could do or say would change that.
âWell, Adam Equinox. It seems no matter how poor an opinion of you I have, you manage to surprise me by sinking even lower. This means the end of that computer for you. You cannot be trusted, therefore you will never touch it again.
âAs far as your proposed plans for the holidays are concerned, I am sorely tempted to cancel it as punishment for your behaviour. But I am a woman of my word. I promised you three chances, and I need hardly tell you one is gone. With a boy like you, the others are certain to follow. However, I shall be obliged to notify Mr Quested of your actions. He should be aware of the kind of child he is inviting into his home.'
She paused, waiting for a reaction. I said nothing. What was the point?
âYou disgust me. Get out of my sight.'
I felt myself flush, but still I didn't say a word. Just turned and walked out of there, down the passage, and out into the garden. Automatically, my feet took me towards the silence and solitude of my secret hide-out. It had been my bolt hole and refuge as far back as I could
remember, a place that had saved my sanity more times than I could count: peaceful, private, and completely mine.
I headed for the shrubbery at the side of the house and double-checked no one was watching. I dropped to my knees and pushed my way into the flax bush guarding the entrance. The smooth leaves stroked my burning face like cool, comforting fingertips, and the familiar scent of damp earth rose up to greet me. As I burrowed deeper, my brain began grinding into gear.
What
Weevil had done â that was obvious enough. But
how?
How had he accessed my directory on the computer? How had he bypassed my secret password? What was it he was always saying?
Weevils can get inside lots of places, Adam. Private places. Anywhere â anywhere at all.
It couldn't be true ⦠could it?
I wriggled round the last bed of the tunnel, and the hidden cave of my hide-out opened out in front of me.
Right in the middle of the smooth earth floor, a word had been gouged in deep, jagged letters.
The magic bubble of my secret sanctuary shattered like glass. A pain sliced through me like a knife, so real that for a moment I thought it had actually happened â an invisible sphere had smashed, and one of the shards had lodged deep in my heart.
For an endless moment I knelt there, head bowed, paralysed. My eyes had squeezed themselves shut, but the crude letters burned in my mind like fire. It was wrecked â forever. Even if I scrubbed the letters out â even if Weevil never set foot there again â it would never be the same.
First Weevil had stolen my project. And now he had ruined the one place I'd thought was mine, and only mine. I had nothing left ⦠or did I?
Instinctively my hand moved to my chest, and felt the
ridged outline of my heavy metal ring under my shirt. Before Quested Court â before Karazan â I'd kept it in my bedside drawer, with my other special treasures. And that's where it would have been that night at Quested Court ⦠if I hadn't taken it out to rub and hold, as I often did for comfort in bed at night, and fallen asleep with it in my hand.
Kneeling in the dirt, I thought back to that night for what seemed like the millionth time ⦠and felt the back of my neck prickle and the hairs on my arms rise. For the millionth time I told myself I must have been dreaming, or at least half asleep â but I knew I hadn't been. The invisible presence I'd felt in the dark room ⦠the drawer open just a crack, when I knew I'd left it shut ⦠the stealthy click of the door snicking shut behind an intruder I couldn't see, but knew in my bones was there. Logic told me it must have been a dream ⦠but instinct told me something different. And following my instinct, I'd kept the ring round my neck on an old bootlace from that day on.
But my other treasures â would they be safe from Weevil? I turned and crawled back through the tunnel for what I knew would be the last time.
I straightened up and brushed away the dirt and bits of dry leaf. I checked no one was around, then crept into the dorm. Slid open my bedside drawer ⦠and felt a dizzying surge of relief. My shawl was there: the shawl I'd been wrapped in when I was found on the steps of Highgate nearly thirteen years ago. Creamy-soft and light as a cloud, still holding a trace of the spicy, powdery perfume of the hands that had wrapped a tiny baby and then deserted him ⦠the perfume of the mother I had never known.
My torch was there ⦠and my dog-eared old
Bible
in its usual place. There was an identical one for every child at Highgate, courtesy of the Board of Trustees â I
doubted even Weevil would give mine a second glance. Still, just to be sure, I flipped it open and checked that the yellowed old newspaper cutting was safe. My eyes rested on it for a moment, catching on a word here and there, though I knew it all by heart â it was the only history I had.
⦠left on the steps of the home probably only hours after being born ⦠calling him Adam Equinox ⦠born on the day of the Equinox â 22
nd
September ⦠dusky complexion, with dark hair and unexpectedly pale eyes ⦠lamb's wool shawl ⦠silver penny whistle and unusual ring â¦
The day of the Equinox. The day when night and day are equal, and the sun is in the sky for exactly 12 hours. My special day â less than a week away. I pushed the thought away impatiently. There were no birthdays at Highgate. Most years, 22 September passed by without me even noticing it. Sure, when I was small I'd made a private ritual of my Naming Day, as I'd thought of it: reading the newspaper cutting over and over again ⦠closing my eyes ⦠reaching out with my thoughts ⦠trying to pretend there was someone out there somewhere who thought of me still and remembered me with love. I didn't bother with that baby stuff any more.
Until further information comes to light, the baby remains in the care of the Highgate Children's Home.
That's how the cutting ended. Well, âfurther information' never had come to light. So here I was, stuck with Matron and Geoffrey â and now Weevil â for keeps.
Closing the
Bible
with a sigh, I reached my fingers to the very back of the drawer, where my silver penny whistle always rolled. Double-checking, though I knew it would be there.
It wasn't.
My fingers scrabbled on the smooth, flat metal. My heart gave a sickening lurch. Frantically, my hand swept
from one side of the empty drawer to the other. I grabbed the drawer and yanked it out with a clatter. Empty. Stupidly, I upended it over the threadbare blanket, in case by some miracle the penny whistle might drop out of nowhere. It didn't. I turned it right way round again and stood staring into it, my mind as cold and empty as the drawer. A word was sounding in that bleak, empty room, but it wasn't in my mind â it was sounding over and over again with every slow, painful beat of my heart:
Weevil. Weevil. Weevil.
I found him in front of the computer.