Friday 26 January

I WAS IN a terrible state this morning, waiting for the lie-detector test. It wasn’t helped by the fact that I could sense that people were staring at me and whispering behind my back. I was used to people laughing at me, but this was different. Suddenly I wasn’t a figure of fun any more. I was …

Evil.

Sorta.

Cooooooooool!

Well, no not really cool. Or cooooooooool! Because, after all, it involved poo, which is the opposite of cool.

When he took the morning register, Mr Wells said ‘Milligan’ in a funny way, which seemed to shout out, ‘Milligan, also known as the Brown Phantom’.

Tamara Bello inched her desk as far away from me as it would go. And Ludmilla didn’t even look at me. So there were a couple of up-sides! I’m kidding. It was all pretty bleak.

At morning break, Renfrew took me to one side.

‘Everyone’s saying it’s you, you know.’

‘The Brown Phantom, you mean?’

‘Yep.’

‘I know.’

‘And are you?’

‘Do you really have to ask me?’

‘Well, it does look bad …’

‘Et tu, Renfrew.’1

‘I just had to ask.’

‘Fine.’

I went to the gym at lunch. The guys came with me as far as the door, but left me there. Some things a boy has to do on his own, such as having a wee and getting his fingernails pulled out by Mr Fricker.

The man himself was waiting for me outside his office. He hadn’t chosen which set of hands to wear yet, and he beckoned me with a bare stump.

Inside there was a table and two chairs. On the table stood a large box, with dials on the front and wires coming out of the back. On top of it there was a red light and a green light.

There was also a rack on the wall with Fricker’s special hands. He selected a pair encased in tight-fitting leather gloves. These were his much-feared Interrogation Hands. As soon as he had them screwed in, he seemed to change. Gone was the hot-tempered shouty psychopath. In its place was something colder and more clinical and, in a way, even scarier.

‘Sit down, Millicent,’ he said. ‘I’m just going to attach these wires to your fingers. Nothing to worry about – they simply record temperature and moisture levels and electrical activity.’ He taped wires to both my forefingers. He was surprisingly adept with his gloved hands. ‘There, comfortable?’

‘Not really, sir.’

‘Good. I’m going to begin by asking you some simple questions. Answer as truthfully as you can.’

‘OK.’

‘Tell me your name.’

‘Dermot Francis Milligan.’

The green light came on. Fricker checked the dials on his machine. He made a little grunting noise.

‘How old are you?’

‘I’m twelve years old.’

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Another green light. Another check, another grunt.

‘What do you think of bananas?’

‘I like them.’

After a brief pause, the red light came on.

Fricker raised an eyebrow. ‘Really? I suggest you reconsider your answer.’

‘OK, I love them.’

Green light.

‘Excellent. Now tell me, where were you two Mondays ago at eleven-fifteen a.m. when the first outrage took place?’

I had to think fast. Did I own up about being in the toilets, or did I try to fool the machine?

Well, a wise man once said that you should only tell lies when you really have to, or when you are trying to stop girls from crying. This time I was going to use truth as my shield and honesty as my sword.

‘I was in the school toilet.’

Green light.

‘What were you doing there?’

‘I was sitting in the cubicle.’

Green light.

‘And?’

‘That was it, sir. I heard someone come in and chuck something on the floor. When I got out of the cubicle, it was just there, on the floor.’

‘The stool?’

‘Yes, the poo.’

Mr Fricker stared at me, and then the green light went on.

For the next ten minutes Mr Fricker asked me about all the other incidents. I got green-lighted on everything. At the end he stood up, and spoke facing away from me.

‘There’s something you should know about me, Millicent.’

‘Sir?’

‘I am an implacable enemy. Get on the wrong side of me and—’ He spun and slammed his leather-clad metal hand down on the table, karate-style, with a terrific crash. ‘But if I’m your friend, then … well, let’s just say that I can make your life easier. I think you’re innocent, Millicent. But, frankly, that may not be enough to save you.’

‘What do you mean, sir?’

‘There’s been a crime, and the top brass want a scapegoat. At the moment, that’s you. I can try to keep them off your back for a while, but unless we’re able to find the real criminal behind all this, then I’m afraid …’ He seemed to be a bit lost for the appropriate words or gesture, so once more, with a mighty ‘Ay-yah!’ he karate-chopped the table.

‘Were you really just in the Catering Corps, sir?’ I asked him.

‘It pays me to let them believe that, Millicent.’

‘One more thing, sir,’ I added. ‘Your lie detector …’

‘Yes?’

‘It was just rubbish, wasn’t it, sir? I mean, you just pressed a button to make the red or green light go on.’

‘Get out of here, Millicent,’ he said, but I thought I spotted a faint smile on his face as he said it.

DONUT COUNT:

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Yeah, I know that’s crashed through the new limit, but I thought I’d earned a small reward for writing such a massive entry in the Donut Diary.

1 ‘Et tu, Brute’ were Julius Caesar’s last words, spoken to his best mate Brutus, when Brutus stabbed him in the guts. It probably means something like: ‘Get stuffed, Brutus, you dirty scumbag.’ Actually, his last words are more likely to have been, ‘Aaaaaaarrrrrggggghhhhhh …’