A Day Of Faces (2 page)

Read A Day Of Faces Online

Authors: Simon K Jones

BOOK: A Day Of Faces
12.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It was my cue to get the hell out. I couldn't see Rachel anywhere so I headed straight for the stairwell, which I knew led out onto the fire escape having spent too many evenings on it with boys I was far too good for. The club was on the second floor of an old converted factory and climbing down to the ground and slinking away shouldn't prove too tricksy.

The fire door had barely closed when it banged open again and a pile of bodies tipped out, shrieking and laughing and swearing. One of them saw me and waved, grinning - it was Marv, his hair not nearly as coiffured as earlier.

"Thought that was you out here," he said. "We should keep moving." He stared intently at the wall of the club for a moment, then started moving me forcibly down the stairs. "Hurry, the cops'll be out here in twenty seconds."

As we leapt two steps at a time towards the alleyway I wondered what could be so bad the police would close down a nightclub. "Police suck," I said, "don't they have worse gigs to crash? Nothing super bad goes down at the Jasmine."

Marv laughed. "You don’t see what's going on in those back rooms," he said with a wink. He pointed back up the fire escape. "Here they come."

Half a second later the fire door banged open again and five cops barrelled out, one by one, each of them scanning the area. Three descended, coming after us and the rest of the clubbers who had come out this way. The other two went in the opposite direction, heading up towards the roof. One of them was older and had wings, which was unusual. You didn’t see wings come down from their ivory towers too often. Everyone on the staircase scattered: a stretcher bridged his way to the adjacent roof and scampered away, I saw a camo attempt to blend into the brickwork only to be easily spotted by an unimpressed thermal cop, and one tusker actually thought it was a good idea to become his own one-man army. That didn’t last long.

We’d found a welcome committee at the bottom of the stairs and were sitting cross-legged on the wet tarmac while we were processed. Not exactly the evening I’d had in mind.

“How come you didn’t see the goons waiting for us, then, Marv?” That was from somebody else, a girl with too much eyeliner, hair like a spider’s web and gills on the side of her neck.

He shrugged. “I was looking the wrong way. How come you didn’t see ‘em, Lottie?”

There were two cops pacing around us, looking pretty nervy. Didn’t really make any sense. “Hey,” I said to the nearest, “you going to charge us with something or what? You can’t just keep us here all night.”

The cop stopped and pointed a gloved finger at me. “You keep that forked tongue of yours in your mouth, and maybe we won’t have ourselves a problem here.”

“You know it’s against the law to stop and search based on phenotype, right?”

“Well, I got a law right here against you using big words, so shut it up.” The cop smirked at his own joke and continued pacing. They were heavily armed and armoured, far more than just a standard beat patrol. Neck-guards, riot helmets, tasers, extinguishers, anti-knife and projectile vests. It looked like they were ready for just about anyone.

“My dad still talks about when this kind of thing happened all the time, man,” Marv said. “Just par for the course back then. Maybe it ain’t such distant past no more, right?”

The first sign that something was happening on the roof was when a policeman fell out of the sky and collided with the ground. It wasn’t like in the movies, when people faceplant like they just tripped and fell. This guy hit the floor then kept going, spreading out horizontally in a big red mess. We all stared for about three seconds, then I broke the tension by vomiting all over my shoes.

A gunshot echoed off the roof of the club. Marv was on his feet, straining his eyes to see what was happening, parsing through the noise of five floors of brick and mortar filled with bodies.

“Ah, crap,” he said.

There was movement on the roof’s edge and a figure stood there momentarily, only barely visible in the spill from the streetlights, then he dove off the edge, spreading wings and arcing out into a glide. His motion was unstable, like he’d never done it before. One of the cops next to us came to his senses and let off a shot, which clipped the guy’s wing but didn’t bring him down. A moment later he’d flown around the side of the building and out of sight, into the darkness.

The same cop grabbed Marv. “You’re a thermal, right? Where’d he go? Can you see where he went?”

Marv brushed his hands down his chest, knocking away the cop. “Get off me, man,” he said. He stared into the distance. “He’s gone. Can’t see him. Looks like you missed your chance.”

Blood from the fallen cop had trickled out, seeping into every pothole and crack in the road. One rivulet had found its way over to me, where it had pooled around my shoes.

I’d never felt sorry for a cop before. That was a feeling I didn’t want to get used to.

alpha

ˈalfə/

noun

denoting the dominant animal or human in a particular group

 

Marv walked me home. There was no need, as I was far more capable of looking after myself than he was. But he was a few years older and thought it was the responsible thing to do. Plus I was pretty sure he had a thing going for me, though for all his joking about I could tell he wasn’t going to make a move. Besides, it was still warm and a pleasant walk, although there was a blustery wind building up, and neither of us really wanted to be alone after seeing the cop pancake.

I thought about inviting him in, then noticed that the living room light was still on, which meant my dad was waiting up for me. Never a good thing. Definitely not something I wanted Marv to experience on a first date. Not ever. Not that it had been a date. You know what I
mean.
5

Here’s the thing about my dad: he’s an
arsehole.
6
That’s pretty much all anybody needed to know about him. If you want a bit more, then all that’s important is that he works in local government, figures he’s pretty important even though they pay him shit, and most nights he gets drunk and slaps my mum about a bit.

Getting home on time like an obedient little girl wasn’t top of my priority list.

As Marv walked away, I snuck my key into the lock and turned it as quietly as possible, avoiding the creaky spots on the porch. The music from the club still thrummed in my ears and I could tell that I’d had a bit too much to drink, to the point that I was aware of not being as quiet as I intended but unable to do anything to prevent myself from clattering about. Squamata were thought of as stealthy, or sneaky, but that had never really worked out for me.

“You’re late.” The voice came from the half—open door to the living room. I could see him sitting in his arm chair, lit only by the side-light and staring through the doorway at me. He’d moved the seat specifically to get that view. Like I said: arsehole.

I took my bag and coat off, hanging them on the banister and abandoning any pretence at quiet.

He came closer, stood in the doorway between the hallway and the living room. “Keep it down,” he said, “your mother’s trying to sleep.” His voice was ash crushed into gravel.

“What do you care?”

“She’s your mother. Show her some respect.”

I smiled and curtsied, then draw two fingers across my lips. “Quiet as a mouse,” I mumbled.

He’d never laid a hand on me. I don’t know why he hadn’t. Maybe he saved it all up for her. It still felt like talking to a coiled spring, one which was aching to leap at my throat. That’s kinda how the tabloids wrote about squamata, but that didn’t even apply to him. He was about as different to me as possible, physically and in all other respects.

The lock on my bedroom door had been removed years ago. Instead, I just jammed a chair under the handle so nobody could come in. It made him mad, but he didn’t seem to have the energy to complain these days.

I was tired and it was late (or was that early?), plus I had a seriously great novel I was halfway through reading, so I undressed as fast as I could and brushed my teeth in the tiny corner sink in my room. The walls were lined with movie posters and album cover art. Everything else was book shelves and mix tape holders. It was my little haven.

Our house backed out onto the town’s huge cemetery, extending off as far as I could see into the night. There were a few lights dotted along paths, revealing headstones and old trees. Our garden wasn’t huge, no more than 10 metres deep, and pretty narrow, leading up to a fence separating it from the graves beyond. I liked it. It meant quiet
neighbours.
7

Because there was literally nobody alive out there I rarely bothered closing my curtains. Waking up to the sun was so much more relaxing than an alarm clock. And at night, looking out at the dark trees and gravestones made it easier to forget everything that was behind me, inside the house.

Tonight, of course, the shed door had come unlocked and was swinging back and forth in the wind, hitting against its frame every few seconds. Having noticed it, I now had to do something about it, if I wanted to get any sleep.

I dragged my heavy, weary body back downstairs and stumbled blearily through the dark house, glad that my dad had already disappeared upstairs. Their room was at the front of the house, so the banging door wouldn’t have bothered them. With a heavy sigh I unlocked the back door and stepped out into the ragged mess that was our garden, carpeted with mossy, tufting grass and lined on either side with fences that propped up an assortment of unused gardening implements, rusting bikes and unidentifiable machine innards.

It was a warm night but I tucked my dressing gown around me and shuffled through the garden, barely keeping my eyes open. An owl hooted somewhere in the graveyard beyond the far fence. Something scurried past and disappeared beneath all the accumulated crap. Some of my friends thought it was creepy backing onto a cemetery but I kinda liked it. You knew where you were at with dead people.

As I approached, the shed door swung open again on its rusty hinges, revealing a black hole of a doorway. Once I’d found a fox sniffling about in there, back when I was a kid. Having heard random tabloid stories of foxes creeping into babies’ rooms and attacking them, I did what any good squamata would do - I bit it. It was dead before it even reached the fence. That was the first and last time I used my venom on anything living. I was pretty annoyed that the memory had resurfaced, in fact.

Something acrid was in the air. I could taste it. There was something coppery, too, like when you cut your lip and taste blood.

I reached the door and put a steadying hand on it before it banged shut again. As I was gently closing it I perceived a large shape inside, heaped in a corner, unmoving. Freezing, I willed my eyes to adjust faster to the darkness and wrestled whether to run back to the house or investigate further. Or just close the damn door and bolt it shut.

Instead, I peeked in closer.

It was a body, I realised, as I discerned legs. There was something else, though, making the torso hard to figure out. The body still wasn’t showing any signs of movement, so I crept a careful step into the shed, leaning down close and flicking my tongue to try to get a better reading.

The coppery taste was blood. I should have recognised it earlier. There was a lot of it in here, splashed across the floor and the wall where the body lay slumped.

Where the shape of the body had been difficult to see I now realised was due to two half-folded, feathered wings, which were probably each five feet across when fully extended. They connected at the shoulder blades, as tended to be the case, with one folded awkwardly across his chest. I traced the blood back up to a gaping hole in the right wing, where the feathers were burnt and caked with dirt. Slowly piecing it together, I figured this guy had been shot while in the air, and had maybe come down in the graveyard.

Sometimes my brain is a bit slow. Not when it comes to thinking of the name of an actor in a movie, or the exact track listing from an obscure album. I could recall that kind of shit straight off the top of my head. But the important stuff? That was often like wading through mud.

That’s why it took me far longer than it should have to realise this was who the cops had been after at the club.

Let’s face it; there was no way I was getting any sleep tonight.

morphology

mɔːˈfɒlədʒi/

noun

a particular form, shape, or structure.

 

It was a habit of mine: not seeing horrible, gory wounds. I’d go as far as saying it was one of my main hobbies. I expended an extraordinary amount of effort into seeing people with whole, unruptured, fully-functioning bodies.

Call me crazy, I just kinda liked it that way.

This made two in one evening. Sure, this guy wasn’t inside-out, but the hole in that wing wasn’t doing him any favours and had turned the shed a dark crimson. Every step I could feel the squelch as my bare feet soaked up more of his blood.

I’m usually pretty decisive. But not this time.

In version one I tip-toe back out of the shed, scamper back across the garden and pick up the phone in the house. Ten minutes later the police arrive, storm through and take the guy away. They thank me, my dad’s impressed for the first time, and I get a great story to tell at school. I never see the guy again.

Other books

Substantial Threat by Nick Oldham
Shades of Blue by Karen Kingsbury
Leaves of Flame by Benjamin Tate
MuTerra-kindle by R. K. Sidler
Just Friends With Benefits by Schorr, Meredith
Tasting the Sky by Ibtisam Barakat
Catch of the Year by Brenda Hammond
Unkillable by Patrick E. McLean
Love & Loss by C. J. Fallowfield