I’m back at school, of course. When I don’t come home, Nan rings the police and reports me missing. I never thought she’d do that, but she does. They find me the next morning, take me down the station, fingerprint me, photograph me, take a DNA swab from my mouth and then chip me, a quick injection in the side of my neck. It’s done before I even know it’s happening.
‘What the fuck? Fucking get off me!’ But it’s too late. It’s there inside me now, a tiny microchip that will tell whoever wants to know everything about me.
‘You can’t do that! I haven’t done nothing!’
‘You’ve been reported missing. You’re under eighteen. Not so easy to run away now. We can always find you.’
When Nan comes to pick me up, I don’t speak to her. I can’t even look at her. She tries to make the peace in the bus on the way home.
‘We both lost our tempers, and said things we shouldn’t, but that’s no reason to go off. I was worried about you. I didn’t know where you was. We need to stick together, Adam. We’ve only got each other now …’
Only got each other. It’s true, but I don’t want her. She’s not my mum. I hardly know her, and what I do know I don’t like.
‘Shall I tell you what they did to me?’
‘Who?’
‘The police. Shall I tell you what they did? They took my DNA, Nan. They chipped me. Just because they picked me up. Because you reported me missing.’
‘Did they? I’m sorry, Adam, I didn’t know they’d do that. Still, it won’t matter if you keep your nose clean, will it?’
‘It’s what they do to dogs, Nan.’
‘They’re doing it to everyone, aren’t they? Working their way through. It would have been your turn eventually, you just got yours early.’
I press my lips together to stop any more words coming out, and turn my head towards the window. There’s no point talking to her, no point at all. She don’t understand.
I come back to school because it’s better than being at home with her.
There’s a racket of scraping chairs as people swap places and get themselves organised. I stand up, ready to move, but nobody’s trying to catch my eye. No one wants to be my partner. On the other side of the room, a girl is standing on her own: it’s her – the girl with the dirty blonde hair. Sarah.
‘Okay, you two, find a desk.’
Sarah looks up at me and it’s like she’s throwing knives across the room. The look in her eyes is so hostile, pure hatred, well not pure ‘cause it’s mixed up with what I saw before – fear. Whatever she knows about me, or thinks she knows, it’s something bad. Really bad.
‘Not him, Miss,’ she says. ‘Don’t make me sit with him.’
Some of the others turn round, sensing something’s up, or about to be.
The teacher sighs.
‘We haven’t got time for this. Unless anyone else wants to swap, you need to work together. Anyone?’
They all shake their heads, shuffle their chairs further in.
‘Sit down, then.’
‘I don’t want to sit with him.’
‘You’ll either sit with him or I’m putting you on report.’ That means a phone call home. It means detention. Sarah takes a moment to consider her options, then sits down at an empty desk. She’s got a face like thunder. I pick up my bag, walk over and sit down opposite her. Keep cool, I’m thinking, don’t say anything stupid. Don’t do anything weird. Just act nice and normal.
‘Hi,’ I say, ‘I’m Adam.’
‘I know who you are,’ she says, talking to the desk, but then her eyes flick up to me briefly, and I catch her number again.
And, again, it stops me in my tracks.
In an instant, the world has disappeared and it’s only me and the moment of her death.
I can feel it in every nerve ending, every cell, in my mind as well as my body – there’s this overwhelming sense of warmth, a peaceful journey out of this life and into another. I’m there with her, I know I am. My arms are around her, the scent of her hair’s in my nostrils. I’m lying there, just being there – with her, for her. Suddenly I don’t know if it’s Sarah or my mum next to me. And I don’t know if she’s leaving or joining me. Which side am I on?
‘Stop that. Stop staring.’
With a jolt I land back in Forest Green School.
‘I’ve got to look at you to draw you,’ I say.
‘I don’t see any drawing.’
I glance down at the desk. She’s already drawn an oval outline and put soft marks where my eyes, nose and mouth are going to go.
‘Right,’ I say. ‘Yes.’ I fish in my bag for my pencil case, slide a piece of paper over the desk towards me and start to sketch the shape of her face. She has shoulder-length hair with a slight wave in it. Her eyes aren’t large, but they are piercing, beautiful, fringed with stubby lashes. Her nose is straight, quite strong-looking, not a little turned-up button like some girls, but it don’t spoil her face. The more I look at it, nothing could spoil it for me.
I try my best to draw what I see. I want her to like it. But it don’t do her justice – you can see it’s a girl, but it’s not her. I keep rubbing bits out, trying again, but it just isn’t happening. And when I look across at her picture, I stop altogether. She works like a real artist, with shading and lines to give her picture a shape. Somehow she’s switched off her feelings. She’s looking at me like I was an object.
The face she’s drawn is a young man, not a boy. It’s strong around the jaw and the cheekbones, and soft around the mouth. But it’s the eyes that strike me most. They look out of the paper straight at me and nowhere else. She’s done something so you can see the light reflected in them, and that gives them a spark, brings them to life. There’s a person in there, someone who laughs and hurts and hopes. She’s drawn what I look like, but, it’s more than that – she’s drawn who I am.
‘Wow,’ I say. ‘That’s amazing.’
She stops, only she don’t look at me but at my drawing of her. I put my hand over the paper, trying to cover it up.
‘Mine’s rubbish,’ I say. ‘I wish I could draw you, your face, properly. I wish I could do it justice.’
Her eyes flick up then, but instead smiling, or blushing even, she scowls.
‘I just meant … I was just trying to …’ I struggle to find the right words. ‘I only meant that you’ve got a lovely face …’
I should have kept my mouth shut. It’s like I’ve insulted her. She looks away and presses her lips together like she’s stopping herself from saying something.
‘… and you’ve done a brilliant job with me. You’ve made me look … well, you’ve made me look …’
‘… beautiful,’ she says. She’s looking back at me now, and even though she’s frowning, she’s holding my eyes with hers and suddenly I’m full of her number again, the warmth and the peace of it. It’s me and her, only me and her.
Then she does something amazing.
‘I don’t understand,’ she says and her voice is quiet and upset, like she’s talking to herself, and she reaches across the table and gently holds her hand up to my right cheek. My mouth falls open with shock and when I breathe out spit gathers at one corner and catches the edge of her thumb.
‘Sarah,’ I whisper.
She looks deeper into me, and she opens her mouth to say something back … and then someone at the back of the class wolf-whistles and she jerks her hand away. I look round and the whole class is watching.
I look back to Sarah for some help, but she’s switched off again. She’s putting her pencils away in a pencil case, gathering up her bag, blushing furiously. The bell rings for the end of the lesson and everyone starts to move.
‘Finish your pictures at home for this week’s homework!’ the teacher shouts over the noise.
I put my things in my bag and scrape back my chair.
‘Sarah,’ I say again, but when I look up there’s only an empty chair. She’s left her pencil case and her paper behind, and she’s go
ne.
Chapter 10: Sarah
There are 20,000 CCTV scanners in London, unblinking eyes watching the streets twenty-four hours a day. They’ll follow you, photograph you, read your chip, log you: who, where, when. I used to think it would be easy to disappear, just walk away and get lost in the crowd, but when you try it, you find out it’s almost impossible. Almost.
I’m feeling confident when I walk out of school at the end of the day. I’ve got clothes, money. I told Mum and Dad I’d be going to camera club after school. They were pleased – a sign that I was joining in. I bought myself an extra hour.
I go straight to the Learning Resource Centre and into the public toilet there. I lock myself in a cubicle, take off my school uniform and change into my own clothes. I was going to leave the uniform – I’ll never need it again – but at the last minute I stuff it back in my bag. I’ve got so few clothes with me, I can use them as extra layers. Two minutes later, I’m out on the street again. A bus is coming down the road. I run to the stop and get on, find a seat at the back and sit there, looking out of the window.
I’m not too bothered where the bus is going, only that it’s taking me away and faster than I could walk. My heart’s beating hard in my chest, so I close my eyes for a minute and try to calm down. I’ve done it! I’ve got away! We’ve got away. We aren’t safe yet, but every minute, every second we’re moving further away – from home, from school, from Him, from Adam.
Adam.
Sitting so close to him, drawing him, looking at him, really looking, I was more certain than ever that he was my nightmare boy. But close to, he isn’t frightening. He’s weird, yes, he’s twitchy and he can’t sit still, and he has this way of looking at you, as though he’s seeing right into you. But instead of freaking me out, I wanted to look back.
In my nightmare, I’m terrified. He’s there with me, in the middle of the flames, and he takes my most precious thing, my baby, takes her out of my arms and walks with her into the fire. But Nightmare Adam is scarred, one side of his face is disfigured and hideous. The Adam at school has the most beautiful skin – smooth, warm, cappuccino skin. When I touched it, when I reached across and touched his face, it felt just the way it looked. Perfect. He has the perfect face, and for a crazy moment I imagine my face near to his, his eyes looking into my eyes, his lips brushing my lips …
The bus jolts and I open my eyes. I’m looking directly at a scanner on the ceiling. Shit! Of course! They all have scanners. I’ve got to get off. Now. I ring the bell and go and stand by the door. Come on, come on. The next stop seems like miles. Finally, we grind to a halt and I’m out through the gap in the doors and walking as fast as I can. I’m trying not to run – people will notice that and remember. There are scanners every hundred metres or so along this road, and a big public information screen on the corner. They put up photos of missing people on those screens. I’ve seen them before. I never thought they could be people like me – people who didn’t want to be found. Will my face be up there tomorrow? As soon as I can, I duck down a side-street.
As I’m walking, I’m thinking. How am I going to do this? If I go to a hotel or a B&B, they’re going to ask for ID. I need a false one, or I need to go where no-one asks for ID. I need to slip under the radar, disappear.
It’s not the sort of thing you can do on your own, without contacts.
I’m suddenly aware of my situation; a sixteen-year-old girl, from a gated community, pregnant, alone in a strange part of London carrying two thousand Euros in cash. What the hell was I thinking? How did I think I was going to manage?
I glance at my watch. 16.40. In about ten minutes, my mum will start wondering where I am. I’ve got no time! At the end of the street, a train rattles past. I could go further on a train. If I could get on one without being seen, I could be fifty, a hundred, two hundred miles away this evening, anywhere in the UK. I’ve got the money. I could do it.
That’s it. I need to get to Paddington.
Not knowing exactly where I am doesn’t help. I’ll have to risk it – go back to the main road and get another bus. Mum won’t call the police until at least six, will she? And by then, I could be away.
Yes, Paddington’s the place.
Back on the main road I don’t have to wait long for a bus. I pull my collar up even though I know it won’t make a difference, and keep my face turned to the floor. I make it to Paddington station, buy a bottle of Coke and try and suss out where the scanners are, find a place where I can look at the departure board, work out where to go, but not be seen. But of course I am seen. As I check it all out, I notice that I’m being watched.
A bloke comes up to me.
‘You new round here? Need somewhere to stay?’
‘No,’ I say, ‘I’m fine. I’m waiting for a friend.’
He looks me up and down and smiles.
‘I can be your friend.’
He’s standing too close to me now. He’s in my face.
‘No,’ I say again. ‘I’m all right.’
‘Come on,’ he says, ‘it’s not a nice place to be on your own.’ I can smell him now, cheap aftershave fighting with the booze on his breath.
‘Fuck off and leave me alone,’ I say, the words braver than I feel. I walk across the concourse, not thinking about the scanners any more, just wanting to get away from him.
I need to buy a ticket, get on a train, get away from here. I’m not sure where, that’s all. Where I should go. There’s a girl standing near the ticket office. She’s not much older than me. Leather jacket, studs all round the edge of her ear. She’s watched me walking over, making my getaway from the sleaze that was chatting me up.
I stop and take a swig of Coke.
‘They’re sick, aren’t they?’ the girl says.
‘Who?’
‘The blokes here. Think they can hit on you just ’cause you’re on your own. Wankers.’
‘Yeah,’ I say. I hold the bottle out towards her.
‘Ta,’ she says, and takes a swig.
‘You on your way somewhere?’
‘Yeah, out of London.’
‘Somewhere good?’
‘Anywhere.’
‘They’ll ask for ID when you buy a ticket, you know.’
‘Oh.’ I didn’t know.
‘If you need somewhere to go, I’ve got a flat. You could stay for a couple of days, ’til you get sorted. There’s the sofa …’
‘Really?’
She nods.
‘Yeah, course. Been where you are myself. Know what it’s like. You need somewhere to get started. Somewhere safe.’
I don’t know her. I don’t know where her flat is. But I like her, her attitude. She’s the same as me, she said it herself.
‘Well, just for a couple of days …’
‘Just for a couple of days.’
She hands the Coke bottle back to me.
‘Meg, by the way,’ she says.
‘Sarah.’
‘Come on,’ she says. ‘Let’s get out of this meat market.’
And I follow her through the station. We’re swallowed up in the crowd, hundreds, thousands of people around us, but it’s okay because I’m not on my own any more.
I’ve got a contact, someone who knows the ropes, and I’ve got somewhere to go.
Chapter 11: Adam
She’s disappeared.
I go to school the next day really psyched. I’m going to find her and talk to her. I can’t wait. But she don’t turn up, not that day or the next one. I start asking people about her – other kids in her tutor group, but no one knows where she is. No one knows much about her at all.
It’s doing my head in. The connection between us – that electricity – it’s all I can think about. Lying in bed at night, I feel her hand on my face and I break out into a sweat. I didn’t dream it. It was real, just like the ache in my balls is real when I think about seeing her, holding her, touching her …
It’s so unfair. The only person in that school to get me, to se
e me for who I am, and now she’s gone.
‘Where’s your girlfriend gone?’
‘One look was enough, then she fucked off!’
‘Aah, he’s all on his own.’
I don’t like what they’re saying, their stupid, ignorant comments, but I try to ignore them. They’re not important. Nothing here is important.
I sit in lessons and it just feels like I’m wasting time – the teachers don’t know squat. They spend their days wittering on about history and geography, literature and science, when I know everything’s going to come crashing round our ears in a few months’ time. It’s all words, just words – plate tectonics, global warming, peak oil, peak water – I can’t see how it connects with what’s happening outside, in London, now. Something’s already started out there, something that’s going to change everything, kill half the people in this room. School’s got nothing to say about it.
I need to find Sarah. She knows something, I’m sure of it. She’s out there somewhere, and I’m not going to find her sitting here. The teacher’s put up a map of the world on the front screen, telling us to copy the shapes of the earth’s plates onto the base map she’s sent to our palm-nets.
I reach down into my bag to get my palm-net out, and I pull out Sarah’s pencil case instead. I picked it up after she ran out of the art room, thought I’d keep it for her, give it back to her the next day with her picture of me. I unzip it and look inside. There’s only pencils and pens and rubbers, but it feels like I’m looking at something private. I go to zip it up again and something catches my eye – there’s writing on the inside, her name and address printed clearly in black biro. I run my thumb across it, like I did with my mum’s letter, hoping to pick up something of her. I read it a couple of times, and the words stick in my head. All the rest of the lesson, I’m running over and over them, until by the time the bell rings, I know what I’m going to do.
Instead of going home, I check out Sarah’s address on my palm-net, and it sat-navs me there. It’s more than six kilometres to Hampstead and it takes me just over an hour, but I don’t mind the walk. It feels like the right thing to do. It feels right to be doing something.