MONDAY, JUNE 1
73 DAYS
Knowing the way into Shackleton’s communications centre was one thing. Actually getting in there and using it, and then getting out without being killed, was a different story altogether. Especially with the new security they were putting up around the entrances. Not to mention the whole town watching our every move.
The only way we’d have any chance of warning the outside was with help from someone on the inside.
Which is how we found ourselves walking up to the security centre the next day, with a note for Officer Reeve.
‘You’re sure you’ve got the right number?’ asked Luke as we walked between the fountain and the Shackleton Building, weaving our bikes through the after-school traffic. ‘If someone else finds that note …’
‘I looked it up in the directory this morning,’ said Jordan. ‘Relax.’
‘Yep,’ I said. ‘Nothing says relaxation like sneaking around behind the security centre to –’
‘Shh!’ said Jordan. A pair of security guards was coming past. They glared at us as they crossed our path, but they kept walking and didn’t give us any trouble.
We waited until they were gone and then turned up the street that runs between the security centre and the Shackleton Building.
‘Shouldn’t we take another way around?’ asked Luke, looking back over his shoulder. ‘Isn’t it kind of suspicious for us to be wandering through here?’
‘This is the way I come home every day,’ I said. ‘The only thing that’s suspicious is you jittering around like an idiot.’
Not that we actually had to be doing anything suspicious to be treated as suspects these days.
The Shackleton Building loomed on our left. For all we knew, everyone in the building could be staring down at us through the one-way glass. I forced myself not to look up until we were around the corner and out of sight.
We stopped at the row of bike racks at the back of the security centre – the place where all the security staff parked while they were at work. Lucky for us, there were no windows back here.
‘All right, start looking,’ I said, starting down the row of bikes. ‘Number zero-one-eight-nine.’
I kept glancing back at the row of houses on the other side of the track. It wasn’t even four o’clock yet. Everyone should still be at work.
So why was I so sure we were being watched?
‘Over here,’ whispered Luke after a minute, hand resting on the seat of one of the bikes.
We dashed over. Jordan pulled a scrap of paper from her pocket.
NEED TO TALK - IMPORTANT.
3.30 P.M. TUESDAY @ ROMEO IX.
She checked the number engraved into the frame of Reeve’s bike, then wedged the paper under the seat.
‘Done,’ she said.
Romeo IX was a set of coordinates on the town map. R9. It corresponded to a place along one of the riding paths called the Nest. I just hoped Reeve was smart enough to –
‘Hey, what are you guys doing?’ squeaked an all-too-familiar voice.
It was Freckles, the Year 7 kid. Ghost was with her.
‘Going back to my place,’ I said, jerking a thumb over my shoulder, down the street.
‘Then why are you over here?’ asked Freckles, coming towards us. ‘Only security are allowed to park here.’
‘Is there something we can do for you guys?’ asked Jordan, cutting in before I had a chance to respond.
‘Actually, there is,’ said Freckles, putting her hands on her hips. ‘We want to know why you guys are still staff-student liaison officers when you’ve been busted stealing and vandalising and stuff.’ She elbowed Ghost in the ribs.
‘Y-yeah,’ said Ghost.
‘Dunno,’ I said. ‘I’m sure Pryor tried to come up with a worse punishment than dealing with you everyday, but –’
Jordan put a hand on my shoulder. ‘Peter …’
Freckles sneered at me. ‘You’re not even doing your job properly,’ she said. ‘We’ve been trying to talk to you for ages, but you guys are never in the playground.’
‘Funny, that,’ I said, looking up and down the street.
Ghost stared at the concrete, like he really didn’t want to get caught up in this.
‘Listen,’ said Jordan, stepping in front of me and looking down at Freckles. ‘We’re sorry we’re not around as much as you’d like. We’ve just been really busy lately. And I know what people are saying about us – that we’re petty criminals or whatever – but a lot of that’s just a misunderstanding. I mean, you can’t always believe everything you hear, right?’
Freckles thought about this for a minute. Then she rolled her eyes. ‘Whatever,’ she said.
She took one last suspicious glance at the bike racks, and then she and Ghost headed back around the side of the security centre.
TUESDAY, JUNE 2
72 DAYS
‘I didn’t say she wasn’t annoying,’ said Jordan the next day. ‘I said it’s probably not smart to bite her head off every time she comes up to us.’
Luke opened his mouth to agree, but I cut in before he had the chance.
‘Yeah, no, you’re right,’ I said. ‘Need to be more careful. But no harm done, right? Pryor’s still got nothing on us.’
‘You keep saying that like it actually means something,’ said Luke.
We were on our way to Pryor’s office with my spectacular forgery of our latest waste-of-time assignment. Staples had caught us on the way into school and asked us to come in at recess.
Pryor was waiting in the front office when we got there.
‘You’re late,’ she said as soon as we were through the door. Her face had the same dark scowl as when she was questioning us about the phone. She’d clearly given up on the whole best-friends-forever bit. She marched us up the hall, snapped at Staples to make sure we weren’t interrupted, and then let us into her office.
Jordan glanced up at the security cameras as she walked in.
‘Your assignment, please,’ said Pryor, stretching a hand out across her desk as soon as we’d all sat down.
‘Here you go, miss,’ I said, handing over the pages. ‘Some of our best work, I reckon.’
Pryor snatched the assignment from me and scanned the first page without speaking. Actually reading it this time. Why? Clearly she wasn’t interested in the results. So what was her game?
I waited, feet scuffing against the rug on the floor.
All these months, I’d been convinced she was holed up in here doing whatever it is that normal principals do, when really she was prancing around the Shackleton Building, plotting world domination.
Pryor turned to the second page and kept reading. Her lip curled.
No way had she spotted my fake. She was good, but she wasn’t that good.
Next to me, Jordan was sitting up way too straight, arms folded in front of her. Nervous. Her eyes kept flitting across in my direction.
Don’t worry, I thought, smiling back at her, letting her know it was all okay. Pryor’s got no idea –
Pryor threw the assignment down on her desk. ‘I am insulted,’ she spat.
I tried to look puzzled. ‘Sorry, miss?’
‘This is unacceptable,’ said Pryor. ‘I want this assignment completed again from scratch.’
‘Why, miss?’ I said. ‘What’s wrong with –?’
‘What’s wrong, Mr Weir, is your attitude. Your blatant disregard for authority and your unwillingness to take seriously the duties that have been assigned to you.’
Jordan glared at me, almost as angry as Pryor. Blaming me.
No. This wasn’t my fault.
‘Miss, no,’ I said, ‘that’s not –’
‘Did you honestly think you could just shrug off this assignment without my knowledge?’ Pryor raised her eyebrows, like she was actually expecting an answer. When I didn’t give her one, she got to her feet. ‘There are no secrets in Phoenix, Mr Weir. I would have hoped I’d made that abundantly clear to you three by now.’
She went to the door and shouted at Staples to join us.
‘I believe our staff-student liaison officers may require some additional supervision as they complete their next assignment,’ Pryor told Staples. ‘I would like you to keep an eye on them. Please ensure that they do not leave school property before four-thirty this afternoon.’
Staples gave Pryor a look like she was pretty sure this wasn’t in her job description, but said, ‘Of course.’
‘Four-thirty?’ I said, trying to stay calm and polite. ‘What for, miss? Won’t everyone be out of here ages before then?
‘Not the students in the study centre,’ said Pryor, eyes glinting. ‘The library doesn’t close until four. We wouldn’t want to neglect those students in our statistics, would we?’
‘No miss,’ I said. ‘We definitely wouldn’t want that.’
Pryor sat back down again. She picked up our assignment and made a show of dropping it into the recycling bin next to her desk.
‘I do hope this isn’t a problem for you, Mr Weir,’ she said, suddenly smiling again. ‘You don’t have somewhere else to be this afternoon, do you?’
‘She knows,’ Luke whispered. ‘She knows we’re meant to be meeting Reeve today.’
‘As if she does,’ I said.
It was 3.25 p.m. And it was raining.
The school was deserted except for Jordan, Luke and me standing out the front, clipboards in hand, waiting to check off the last few losers on their way out of the library.
‘Why else would she make us re-do the assignment?’ asked Luke.
‘Because she could tell the first one was a fake, that’s why,’ said Jordan, water dripping down her braids.
‘Whoa, hey,’ I said. ‘I didn’t get this far at school by not knowing how to fake an assignment. That Year 7 kid must’ve said something to her.’
‘And I wonder who could’ve made her angry enough to do that,’ said Jordan.
I shivered in the cold, mind racing for a way to redeem myself.
How long had Freckles been watching us before she spoke up? Long enough to see where we’d hidden the note? Or had she just gone to Pryor to have a whinge about us not doing our jobs properly?
Either way, we were screwed unless we could find a way out of here.
I looked back towards the front office. Staples was standing a few metres away, holding an umbrella and a mug of coffee, looking as frustrated as we were to be stuck out here.
‘All right,’ I said. ‘Let me handle this.’
Jordan shot me a sceptical look. I ignored it and started walking over to Staples.
‘Hey, miss!’ I called. ‘You look cold.’
Staples’ eyes narrowed. ‘Back to work, Peter.’
Usually, Mrs Stapleton wasn’t a teacher you tried to negotiate with, but I was betting this whole situation had her just irritated enough to hear me out.
‘Ah, don’t be like that, miss!’ I smiled. ‘Why don’t we get out of your hair and let you get back inside?’
‘It’s only three-thirty,’ said Staples. ‘Ms Pryor wants you out here for another hour.’
‘Come on, miss,’ I said. ‘Stuff Pryor. She’s wasting our time.’
‘Peter,’ she barked, but only half-heartedly. ‘I will not have you speaking so disrespectfully about our principal. Whatever either of us may think about the task Ms Pryor has given us, the fact remains that she is in charge, and this is her decision.’
‘Yeah,’ I said, ‘but what she doesn’t know won’t hurt her, will it miss?’
For a second, I swear she almost smiled.
‘We’ll even swing by the library on the way out,’ I lied. ‘Count how many kids are in there and put them on our maps. Everybody wins!’
Staples stared at me for a long moment. She took a sip of her coffee and gazed across in the direction of Pryor’s office, shivering slightly.
Then she looked back at me and shook her head. ‘All right,’ she sighed, like she was agreeing to this against her better judgement. ‘Go.’
‘Thanks, miss!’ I grinned. ‘You’re the best!’
‘If you breathe one word of this to anybody, I will see to it personally that you are expelled from Phoenix High.’
‘Got it,’ I said, ‘Have a good afternoon, miss!’
I came back over to join the others, soaking up the disbelieving expression on Jordan’s face as she watched Staples walk away across the grass.
‘What did you –?’
‘Told you I’d handle it,’ I said, shoving my clipboard into my backpack. ‘C’mon. Let’s go find Reeve.’