A dark-haired guy stood a few steps away, next to a girl wearing half her body weight in make-up. Mike and Cathryn, Tank's friends. Both looking stony-faced and not at all surprised.
This wasn't just some random outburst. They were all in on it.
Jeremy was being
punished
.
Whump!
The next blow caught him square in the chest. I saw Luke cringe. He knew exactly what this kid was going through. Jeremy was starting to cry now. He tried to scramble away, but there was a reason why his attacker was called Tank.
I'd seen enough. âOi!' I shouted, storming over. âGet off him!'
Tank kept right on punching.
âStay out of this, Jordan,' said Mike, glaring at me from behind his sunglasses. He moved between me and the beating. âNot your fight.'
âIt is now,' I muttered, shoving past and gripping Tank's shoulders with both hands. I pulled him back hard. He took a couple of stumbling steps backwards, and then twisted around, trying to claw me off.
âLet go of me, you dumb bâ'
â
WHAT
DO YOU TWO THINK YOU ARE DOING?'
Mr Hanger had just come roaring in from the quad. I dropped from Tank's shoulders and turned to face him.
Tank glanced over at Mike, looking for instructions. Mike shook his head.
âSir!' said Peter. âTank was beating up one of the Year 7s! Jordan was just trying to â'
âQuiet, Peter,' Mr Hanger snapped.
Jeremy was still crying on the floor. I reached out a hand and pulled him up.
Mr Hanger strode closer to the two of us. âAnything you'd like to tell me, Jeremy?'
Jeremy opened his mouth to explain, but then Tank held a fist up behind Mr Hanger's back and he said, âNo, sir.'
âAll right then,' said Mr Hanger. âAll of you â
out.
'
âSir,' I said, âyou can't just â'
âYou heard me, Miss Burke.'
I glared at him, but gave up the argument. Couldn't risk getting Pryor involved.
Satisfied, Mr Hanger walked off. I looked around for Jeremy, but he'd already made his escape.
Mike, Cathryn and Tank were halfway down the hall, heading out to the quad.
âSo this is what you guys are doing for fun these days, huh?' Peter called after them. âBeating up little kids?'
âOnly the ones who deserve it,' said Mike.
Peter started after them, but I grabbed his arm. âDon't. Not now.'
âYeah,' said Luke. âBell's about to go anyway. We can corner them in science.'
âWhoa â what's that?' said Peter. His attention had shifted to my hand around his arm.
I let go. âI already told you, I fell off my bike on the way.'
âNo, Jordan,' said Luke.
âLook.'
I stared down at my right hand, the hand I'd used to help Jeremy up off the floor. It was covered in a patch of something pinkish-white.
No, not covered.
Stained.
A whole patch of my skin had suddenly changed colour from brown to white.
A patch of skin the exact size and shape of Jeremy's hand.
S
ATURDAY
, J
UNE
13
61
DAYS
âIt still won't come off,' I said, stretching out my hand to reveal the five-fingered birthmark wrapping around my palm and up my wrist, like Jeremy had dipped his hand in paint before grabbing me with it. I'd had a go at covering over the mark with some of Mum's concealer, but it was still pretty visible if you were looking for it.
When we'd got to science yesterday morning, I'd noticed that Tank's knuckles were the same â pale white in the places where they'd collided with Jeremy. The change wasn't as noticeable on Tank's lighter skin, but it was definitely still there.
Jeremy had stayed well clear of us all for the rest of the day.
Now it was late the next afternoon and I was over at Luke's place, waiting for Montag to arrive. It was weird being here without Peter. It shouldn't have been a big deal, but for some reason it left me feeling slightly on-edge.
In my house, this upstairs bedroom belonged to Georgia. It was kind of unsettling to see it all scattered with inside-out clothes and video game magazines and smelling like boy. Since I'd been up here last, Luke had blu-tacked a couple of old photos of him and his dad to the wall above his bed.
The doc was running late. If he didn't hurry up, Dad would be coming over to get me before we'd even had time to eat.
âDid your parents notice?' asked Luke, studying my hand.
âNope,' I said. âYou know how distracted they both are lately. Besides, last night they were much more interested in having a “discussion” about why I've suddenly turned into a pyromaniac.'
âBet that was fun,' said Luke.
âThey
know,
' I said, before I'd even realised I was saying it. âThey know I'm hiding something.
Dad kept asking me these leading questions, like he
wanted
me to deny it all â and I almost â¦'
I sighed and sat down on the edge of Luke's bed. âLook, I know we can't tell them anything, but â They're just so
confused
. And it's hurting them. I can't keep this up forever. I don't know how much longer I can keep on pretending everything's all right.'
Luke sat down next to me. âWhat is it now? Sixty-two days?'
âSixty-one,' I said.
âRight.'
I stared out the window.
âDoesn't even make sense,' said Luke eventually, breaking the silence. âThey print these accusations, but then they don't even do anything about them. Not that it matters to my mum. She's still buying everything the Co-operative tells her â especially the stuff about me. But she's decided it's my way of coping with the divorce, and her thing with Montag, so she's being extra nice to me all of a sudden. Just waiting for me to get it out of my system and go back to being a good little boy again.' He rolled his eyes.
Luke was like the complete opposite of Peter.
Peter was erratic, all-over-the-place. You could put him in the same situation ten times and he'd react ten different ways.
Luke was much more straightforward. Not in a simple, predictable way. But I knew I could count on him to make sense.
He reached down and picked up my right hand, pulling me back to the present. But he wasn't looking at the handprint. He was looking at the graze I'd given myself yesterday morning.
âIt happened again, didn't it?' he said. âAnother one of your ⦠vision things.'
âWhat makes you say that?' I said.
Luke gave me a look. âSince when do you just randomly fall off your bike on the way to school?'
He ran a finger across the graze on my palm, then suddenly seemed to realise what he was doing and dropped my hand back into my lap.
âYeah,' I said, losing focus for a second. âYeah, you're right.'
I stood up.
âWhat happened?' he asked.
âIt was the night at the Shackleton Building. When all of the stuff with Mum's baby started. And it was the clearest one so far. The one of â of Reeve at Flameburger, and the one of the trapdoor thing in Pryor's office ⦠They were just kind of
flashes
. You know, bits and pieces. But this one â I was there for, like, a good thirty seconds. A minute, even.'
Luke got to his feet too. I expected him to come out with something sympathetic or reassuring, but instead he said, âDo you think they're connected?'
âWhat?'
âYour â Your visions or whatever they are, and Ghost's skin thing. Both happening here in Phoenix. I mean, it can't just be a coincidence, can it?'
My stomach turned. The same idea had occurred to me, but I'd been trying not to think about it. Because if me and Jeremy were both being affected by the same thing â¦
âCrap,' said Luke, catching up. âCrazy Bill.'
âYeah,' I said heavily. âRemember back in Ketterley's office? Ketterley and Calvin were talking about him. Ketterley was worried that whatever's happened to Bill might start happening to ⦠other people. What if he was right? I mean, what if
that's
why Bill knows so much? Because he's seen it all already. What if I'm â?'
âJordan, stop. You're not turning into Bill.'
âYou don't
know
what I'm â'
âWe can fix it,' he said firmly. âThat's why we're fighting. So we can
stop
whatever's going on out here.' He yanked my hand up in front of me. âIncluding this.'
I stared at the hand for a second, then pulled it out of his grip.
âYeah,' I said. âYou're right. Sorry.'
âNo, listen, you're not the only one who's â'
He broke off as the doorbell rang. âMontag,' he said, warmth disappearing from his voice. âAbout time. You ready?'
We headed downstairs and found Luke's mum showing Montag into the dining room. When I'd arrived, she'd still had a suit on from her day in the office, but she'd obviously dressed herself up a bit in the meantime. Luke's eyes went dark at the sight of the skirt she was wearing.
Montag was standing with his back to us. Luke's mum looked past him and saw us coming through the doorway.
âHave a seat, guys!' she said, slipping into the kitchen. âJust getting the salad.'
The doc turned around, and I almost smiled at the shocked expression on his face.
He didn't know we were coming.
âLuke,' he said, recovering quickly as Ms Hunter returned. âGood to see you again.'
âThought it was about time you two started getting to know each other a bit better,' she smiled, putting the salad bowl down on the table.
âAh, of course,' said Montag. He pulled out a chair. âThis looks wonderful, Emily.'
The table was piled high with food: a big lamb roast (which made me wonder again where all our meat was coming from in this place), potatoes, salad and veggies, hot bread rolls â¦
Luke sat down at the table, fuming. He was always complaining that his mum never made the effort to cook anything, but it looked like she'd made an exception for the doc.
âOh, it's not much, really,' said Luke's mum, taking my plate and piling on a bit of everything. âHow was work?'
âSame as usual,' said Montag. âRun off my feet.'
My chest tightened. Mum had been back at the medical centre today for yet another appointment.
âAnd you?' the doc asked.
âExhausting,' Ms Hunter sighed. âI barely got through anything with all the people coming in and out of my office. I assume you've heard about Luke's latest escapade?' She sent a disapproving look in my direction. Apparently, her tolerance for Luke's actions didn't extend to me.
Luke glared at his mum across the table. Even in a normal dinner situation, bringing your son's behaviour issues up in front of your new boyfriend wasn't exactly a diplomatic move.
âI did read something about it in yesterday's paper,' said Montag, buttering a roll. He looked up at Luke and me. âYou children should be more careful. Keep carrying on like that and you're going to find yourself in some serious trouble.'
I stabbed my fork down into a hunk of meat, imagining it was Montag's leg.
âFunny how we managed to be in two places at once that night,' I said. âSomehow getting that fire started even though we were sitting at Reeve's funeral the whole time. Pretty impressive, when you think about it.'
Luke's mum pursed her lips.
Montag swallowed a mouthful of food and dabbed his beard with a serviette. âMay I give you some advice, Jordan? If you ask me, you'd be far better off simply owning up to your indiscretions. Denial will only get you deeper into trouble.'
âYeah, thanks for the tip,' I said coldly.
Luke's eyes twitched between me and the doc, and I could tell he was starting to wonder whether bringing me here had been such a good idea.
âTerrible what happened to that poor security officer,' said Luke's mum abruptly. But if she was looking for a way to defuse the tension, she'd picked the wrong topic.
âYeah,' I said, staring at Montag. âTerrible.'
âQuite tragic,' he agreed, putting down his knife and fork for a moment. âThough his own recklessness played no small part in it.'
My insides twisted again.
âMm,' said Luke's mum, taking a drink of water. âTrying to help out with some repairs or something, wasn't he?'
âFoolish,' said Montag. âHe was toying with things far beyond his understanding. He should have kept right out of it.'
âSo Reeve deserved what he got, did he?' I said, raising my voice more than I'd meant to.
Ms Hunter's face was beginning to turn red.
âIt was an abject mess of a situation caused by reckless and irresponsible behaviour,' said Montag, gripping the table with both hands. âI did everything I could to save as many lives as possible.'