Page 1 of Genius Squad




  Genius Squad

  Catherine Jinks

  * * *

  GRAPHIA

  HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURT

  BOSTON NEW YORK

  * * *

  Acknowledgments

  The author would like to thank Richard Buckland, Jamie Grant,

  Jill Grinberg, Margaret Connolly, and Peter Dockrill for their assistance.

  * * *

  Copyright © 2008 by Catherine Jinks

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Graphia, an imprint of Houghton

  Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Originally published in hardcover in the United States

  by Harcourt, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2008.

  Graphia and the Graphia logo are registered trademarks of

  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

  Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be

  submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or mailed to the following address:

  Permissions Department, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,

  6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

  www.graphiabooks.com

  First published in 2008 by Allen & Unwin, Australia

  First U.S. edition 2008

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

  Jinks, Catherine.

  Genius squad/Catherine Jinks.

  p. cm.

  Sequel to: Evil genius.

  Summary: After the Axis Institute is blown up, fifteen-year-old Cadel Piggot is

  unhappily stuck in foster care with constant police surveillance to protect him from the

  evil Prosper English until he gets an offer to join a mysterious group called Genius Squad.

  [1. Genius—Fiction. 2. Identity—Fiction. 3. Crime—Fiction.

  4. Good and evil—Fiction. 5. Australia—Fiction. 6. Science fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.J5754Gen 2008

  [Fic]—dc22 2007030373

  ISBN 978-0-15-205985-9

  ISBN 978-0-15-206650-5 pb

  Text set in Ehrhardt MT

  Designed by April Ward

  A C E G H F D B

  Printed in the United States of America

  This is a work of fiction. All the names, characters, places, organizations, and events

  portrayed in this book are products of the author's imagination. Any resemblance

  to any organization, event, or actual person, living or dead, is unintentional.

  * * *

  To Kathy Dawson, who conjured this book into existence

  PART ONE

  ONE

  Cadel was in a very sour mood when he first met Detective Inspector Saul Greeniaus.

  The day had started badly. To begin with, Cadel had been woken up at 3:00 A.M. by the sound of piercing screams coming from Janan's bedroom. Though only six years old, Janan had the lung capacity of a whale. He also suffered from night terrors, and the combination was deadly. Cadel usually felt sorry for Janan, who had been living in foster homes for most of his life. But it was hard to sympathize with anyone at three o'clock in the morning, let alone a kid who could scream like a hysterical gibbon.

  As a result of his interrupted sleep, Cadel was late for breakfast. Not that it mattered. He didn't have to go to school, so Mr. and Mrs. Donkin never insisted that he be awake at a specific time. But Mace and Janan did attend school, and were finishing their eggs just as Cadel arrived in the kitchen. Had Cadel been feeling more alert, he would never have sat down to eat just then. He would have waited until Mace was out of the house and running to catch the bus, his gray shirt untucked and his thick legs pumping.

  Had Cadel used his brain, he would have sensed trouble in the air, and tried to head it off.

  The whole problem was that he couldn't protect his own bedroom. There was a house rule about always knocking first, and another rule about respecting privacy. These rules were written in beautiful script on a piece of handmade paper that was pinned to the door of the pantry cupboard. (Hazel had done an evening course in calligraphy.) But both rules were quite easy to break, because Hazel had banned locks and keys from the Donkin premises.

  Cadel could understand her point of view. One of her previous foster sons had locked himself in his bedroom before trying to set it alight. Leslie, her husband, had then been forced to smash through the door with a hammer. So although Hazel continuously said nice things about sharing, and everyone "always being welcome everywhere," Cadel felt sure that her open-door policy was rooted in fear. She was afraid of what might happen if, during an emergency, she couldn't reach any of the kids in her charge.

  This was certainly Fiona's opinion. Fiona Currey was Cadel's social worker. She had told Cadel about the locked-bedroom incident, after Cadel had finally complained to her about Mace, who liked to mess around with other people's possessions. It was pointless complaining to Hazel, as Cadel had discovered. Her answer to every problem was what she called a "family conference."

  "I'm sorry, Cadel," Fiona had said. "I know it must be hard, but it won't be forever. Just hang in there. Mace isn't nearly as bright as you are; surely you can handle him for a little while? Until things are sorted out?"

  Most people seemed to jump to the same conclusion about Mace, whose real name was Thomas Logge. They thought that he was stupid. They looked at his lumbering form, his vacant grin, and his clumsy movements, and they made allowances. They heard his slow, awkward speech patterns and dismissed him as a big dumb kid. Whenever he smashed something, they called it an accident; cracked windows and broken doorknobs were explained away. Mace, they said, had badly underdeveloped fine motor skills for a fourteen-year-old. He didn't know his own strength. He might have poor impulse control, but he wasn't malicious. He wasn't clever enough to be malicious.

  Only Cadel had doubts about this interpretation of Mace's conduct. In Cadel's opinion, Mace was a lot smarter than he let on. Not brilliant, of course, but cunning. Had he been as stupid as everyone made out, Mace wouldn't have been so quick to take advantage of the few minutes granted to him while Cadel was eating breakfast.

  How many minutes had it been? Six? Seven? Long enough for Cadel to gobble down an English muffin. Long enough for Mace to empty his bladder into Cadel's bed.

  When Cadel returned to his room, he found his mattress wet and stinking.

  "Mace did it," he told Hazel.

  "No, I didn't!" That was another thing about Mace; he had perfected the art of sounding completely clueless. "I did not! He's blaming me because he wet his bed!"

  "Did you really wet your bed, Cadel?" asked Janan, who wet his own bed all the time. He sounded pleased—even excited—to discover that someone else shared his problem. Especially someone who had recently turned fifteen.

  "There's nothing wrong with wetting the bed," Hazel assured them all, in soothing tones. "I have plastic covers on the mattresses, and I can easily wash the sheets. You don't ever have to feel bad about wetting the bed."

  "I don't feel bad," said Cadel, through his teeth. "Because I didn't wet it. Mace did."

  "I did not!"

  "Then why are my pajamas bone dry?" asked Cadel, holding them up for inspection. Mace blinked, and Hazel looked concerned. She never frowned; her wide, plump face wasn't built for frowning. In situations where other people might have worn grim or angry expressions, Hazel merely looked concerned, dismayed, or disconcerted.

  "Oh dear," she said.

  "He probably didn't even wear his pajamas," Mace remarked cheerily, demonstrating once again—in Cadel's opinion—that he wasn't as thick as everyone assumed.

  "Those pajamas were clean last night," Cadel pointed out, trying to stay calm. "Hazel, you gave th
em to me, remember? Do they smell as if I've worn them?"

  Hazel took the pajamas. She put them to her small, round nose. Cadel knew that when it came to laundry, Hazel had the nose of a bloodhound. After bringing up four children and twelve foster children, she was thoroughly trained in the art of distinguishing dirty garments from clean ones.

  A single sniff was all that it took. She turned to Mace, looking disappointed.

  "Now, Thomas," she said, "have you been lying to me?"

  Mace shook his head.

  "Because you know what I've said about this, Thomas. Sometimes we feel angry and frustrated, and do things we're ashamed of. Then we lie about them afterward, to protect ourselves. But most of the time, there's no need to lie. Because it's the lie that people find hard to forgive, not the offense..."

  Cadel took a deep breath, willing himself to be patient. Hazel, he knew, was a really, really nice person. He admired her selflessness. He was grateful to her for cooking his meals, washing his clothes, and letting him use her computer.

  But she was also driving him mad. Sometimes he could understand why Janan threw such terrible tantrums. Cadel was often tempted to throw one himself, after sitting through yet another gentle, stumbling lecture on why it was important not to kick a football at somebody's face. He had to make allowances; he realized that. No doubt Hazel was used to dealing with kids who didn't grasp how wrong it was to throw large, heavy objects at people. Or spit in their food. Or piss in their beds.

  All the same, he found it hard not to lose his temper. Because Mace, he knew, needed no reminding about the proper way to behave. That dumb act was all a front.

  "Okay, okay," Mace finally conceded. It seemed that he, too, could only stand so much of Hazel's well-meaning counsel. "I did it. I was joking. Can't you take a joke?"

  "But it's not a very nice joke, is it, Thomas? Cadel doesn't see it that way. Would you like it if he went to the toilet on your bed?"

  Mace shrugged. He was still smiling a big, goofy smile.

  "My brother used to crap on my pillow," he said. "Everyone used to laugh."

  "I know." Hazel was very earnest. Very sympathetic. "It must have hurt when your brothers laughed at you. Still, that's no reason to make other people feel bad, is it?"

  Hazel proceeded to explain why she was going to ask Mace to strip and remake Cadel's bed. But Cadel didn't want Mace in his room again. Enough was enough.

  "It's all right," he interjected. "I'll do it myself. Or Mace will miss the bus." (And if Mace missed the bus, there was every chance that he wouldn't end up going to school at all.) "I don't mind," said Cadel. "Really. There's not much else for me to do, anyway."

  Everyone stared at him in utter disbelief. So he pursed his lips and opened his big, blue eyes very wide—and it worked, as usual. Nobody looking at his angelic face would ever have suspected that he was planning to dump the soiled sheets on top of Mace's prized football boots.

  "Well, that's nice of you, dear," said Hazel, somewhat at a loss. "I hope you're going to apologize to Cadel, Thomas?"

  "Oh, yeah," Mace replied, with an obvious lack of enthusiasm. He opened his mouth. He took a deep breath. Then suddenly he yelled something about hearing the bus, and bolted into the garden.

  Every footfall shook the house. His schoolbag knocked a calendar from the wall. The screen door slammed behind him with an almighty crash.

  Cadel peered through the kitchen window at his retreating form, as it moved across a large patch of mangy grass toward the front gate. Beyond this gate lay a wide, almost treeless street. Cadel could see a pair of sneakers, their laces tied together, dangling from a suspended power line. He could see a small plastic bag skipping along the footpath in a fitful breeze. He could see a sparrow pecking at something edible in the gutter.

  But the school bus was nowhere in sight.

  "I'll make him apologize properly when he gets home," Hazel promised, before hustling Janan into her car. For about twenty blessed minutes, while Janan was being delivered to school, Cadel had the house to himself. But then Hazel returned home, and settled in front of her computer (she had a part-time data entry job), and Cadel, once again, found himself with nothing to do.

  Nobody seemed to want him anymore.

  None of the universities wanted him. Even though he had completed high school more than a year before, at the age of thirteen—even though he had scored perfect marks in all his exams, and knew almost everything there was to know about computers—Fiona could not find a single faculty anywhere that would admit him. This was because he had no official status in Australia. He was an illegal alien. No one knew exactly when he had arrived, or exactly where he had come from. It was thought that he had been smuggled into the country at the age of two. It was also thought that he might have been born in the USA. Australia, therefore, didn't want him. But the United States didn't want him, either. Since no record of his birth existed, there was no proof that he could legitimately claim US. citizenship.

  Most importantly, no one could be sure who his father and mother were. The woman who may have been his mother had died mysteriously, in the States, when he was still an infant; officially, her murder had never been solved. And the man who had once claimed to be his father (off the record) now refused to admit it in public.

  Even his own father didn't want him.

  Cadel was therefore living in a kind of limbo, with nothing whatsoever to do. He didn't even have access to his own computer. At one point he had owned two computers, but both had been confiscated by the police as evidence. They were part of an ongoing investigation into the activities of Prosper English (alias Thaddeus Roth), who may or may not have been Cadel's father. Prosper was in jail now, awaiting trial on charges ranging from fraud to homicide. His network of employees had disintegrated. His assets were frozen. His various properties were being treated as crime scenes.

  It was all a huge mess, and Cadel was sitting right in the middle of it. Nobody knew what to do with him. He had no money. No family. No country of origin. He didn't even appear to have a name. Originally, he had been called Cadel Piggott. Then his surname had been changed to Darkkon, when Dr. Phineas Darkkon—the criminal mastermind and genetic engineer—had suddenly appeared in his life, claiming to be his father. But Phineas was dead now, killed by cancer, and very probably hadn't been his father after all. Prosper English, Darkkon's former second-in-command, was a far more likely candidate. Only Prosper wouldn't admit to anything.

  So what was Cadel supposed to call himself? Cadel English? Cadel Doe?

  Fiona called him Cadel Piggott, because Piggott had been the assumed name of his adoptive parents. Not that they had really been Piggotts. And their adoption of Cadel had never been officially recognized. They'd never even been married. Dr. Darkkon had simply employed them to raise Cadel as a screwed-up little weirdo.

  Cadel didn't know where they were now. Nor did he know what had happened to the house in which he'd lived between the ages of two and fourteen. His whole former life had been torn up and thrown away, like so much scrap paper.

  All he had left was one friend Sonja Pirovic She was the only person who had never lied to him. So Cadel decided to visit her, on the day he first met Saul Greeniaus.

  He hoped that visiting Sonja might cheer him up.

  TWO

  Unfortunately, Sonja lived a long, long way from the Donkins' house.

  To reach her, Cadel had to spend an hour and a half on public transport. He had to catch a bus, then a train, and then another train. That was why he sometimes booked taxis. And why, as a consequence, he was always broke—despite the fact that he received a small allowance from the government.

  It was all quite maddening, because the police could easily have given him a lift. On the morning of the urine incident, Cadel wandered into Versailles Street at about half past nine and saw that two plainclothes policemen were sitting in an unmarked car, as usual, some distance from the Donkins' driveway. One of the policemen looked familiar. The other did not Cadel
wasn't sure exactly which agency they belonged to—whether they worked for the Australian Federal Police, the Australian Security and Intelligence Office, or even the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. All he knew was that the Donkins' house was constantly being watched and that whenever he left it, he would always be followed.

  At first this had pleased him. He had felt safer knowing that Prosper English couldn't get at him without alerting the authorities. Once or twice he had even asked his bodyguards for a lift. Their response, however, had been disappointing. He had been told that the officers assigned to tail him were not his personal chauffeurs. They were there to do a job. Cadel's job was to pretend that they didn't exist and to go about his normal business without acknowledging that they were dogging his footsteps.

  "But I'm catching a bus," Cadel had protested, during his first conversation with the surveillance team.

  "Then one of us will catch it with you," was the reply.

  "But wouldn't it be easier just to drive me to Sonja's house?"

  "No."

  "Why not?"

  "Because it's not in the job description."

  And that was that. No matter whose shift it happened to be, not one of Cadel's watchdogs would help him. Instead, as he trudged along the street to the bus stop, they would drive past him, park up the road a little, and wait until he had left them behind, before driving on again. Even when it was raining, they refused to pick him up.

  Cadel resented this attitude so much that he had begun to toy with various notions that he should never have entertained: notions of shaking them off, just to annoy them. He could have done it quite easily. He had dodged pursuers before, on numerous occasions; Prosper English had always tried to keep him closely monitored. But behavior like that belonged to his past life—a life of subterfuge, manipulation, and despair. It was not a life that he remembered fondly. He was ashamed of the person he had been back then. Through the agency of the Piggotts, Prosper English had raised him as a scheming, friendless, emotionally stunted freak. Cadel had left that freak behind and did not intend to welcome him back by indulging in the sort of nasty intrigues that had once kept him fully occupied.