Major Yu’s bone structure wasn’t strong enough to with-stand it. Every single bone in his body fractured at the same time. For about two seconds, he remained vaguely human. Then his body, with no frame to support it, crumpled in on itself, a bag of skin full of broken pieces. The boat veered around, a hundred thousand dollars’ worth of British engineering with no one to steer it. Zigzagging crazily, it disappeared into the night.
Back on Dragon Nine, Yu’s remaining men were being rounded up. The SAS had lost two men, with three more injured. Ben Daniels was still alive. He’d been given a
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shot of morphine, and there was an oxygen mask strapped to his face.
Scooter had finally noticed the other body lying in the control room.
“Who was that?” he asked.
Alex took one last look at his godfather.
“It was nobody,” he said.
23
D I N N E R F O R T H R E E
“ I T ’ S V E RY G O O D T O see you, Alex. How are you getting on at school?”
It seemed a very long time since Alex had last found himself back in this room, the office on the fifteenth floor of the building on Liverpool Street that called itself the Royal and General Bank but that in fact housed the Special Operations division of MI6. Alan Blunt, its chief executive, was sitting opposite him, his desk as neat and as empty as ever: a couple of folders, some papers await-ing signature, a single pen, solid silver, resting at an angle.
Everything in its place. Alex knew that Blunt liked it that way.
Blunt didn’t seem to have changed at all. Even the suit was the same, and if there was a little more gray in his hair, who would notice when the man had been entirely gray to begin with? But Blunt was not the sort of person to grow old and wrinkled, to wear baggy sweaters, play golf, and spend more time with his grandchildren. His job, the world he inhabited, had somehow pinned him down. He was, Alex decided, a twenty-first-century fossil.
It was the first week of December, and suddenly the temperature had dropped, as if in response to the Christmas decorations, which were going up all around. There
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had even been a few scatterings of snow. There wasn’t enough to stick, but it had added a certain chill to the air.
Walking to the office, Alex had passed a Salvation Army band playing “Good King Wenceslas.” The players had been huddling together as if for comfort, and even their music had been cold and mournful . . . as well as slightly out of tune.
He couldn’t hear the music in the office. The windows would doubtless have been double or triple glazed to stop any sound from coming in or—more importantly—
leaking out. He focused his attention on the man sitting opposite him and wondered how he should answer the question. Blunt would know already, of course. He would probably have access to Alex’s school reports before they were even printed.
Alex had just completed his first week back at Brookland School. Blunt would know that too. Alex had no doubt that he had been under twenty-four-hour surveillance from the moment his Qantas flight had touched down at Heathrow Airport and he had been hurried out through the VIP channel to the waiting car outside. The last time he had taken on Scorpia, he had been shot, and MI6 certainly weren’t going to let that happen again. He thought he had seen his tail once: a youngish man standing on a street corner, seemingly waiting for a taxi. When he had looked for him a second later, the man had disappeared. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn’t. Blunt’s field agents knew how to live in the shadows.
And so, finally, he was back at school.
For most kids of his age, it meant coursework and homework, lessons that dragged on too long, and terrible food. For Alex it was all that and something more. He had been nervous, walking back into Brookland on a chilly Monday morning. It had seemed a long time since he had seen the familiar buildings: the bright red brickwork and the stretches of plate glass. Miss Bedfordshire, the school secretary, who had always had a soft spot for him, had been waiting in the reception area.
“Alex Rider!” she had exclaimed. “What has it been this time?”
“Glandular fever, Miss Bedfordshire.” Alex’s illnesses had become almost legendary in the past year. Part of him wondered if Miss Bedfordshire really believed in them or if she was just playing along.
“You’re going to have to drop a whole year if you’re not careful,” she remarked.
“I’m very careful, Miss Bedfordshire.”
“I’m sure you are.”
In Sydney, Alex had been worried that he wouldn’t fit in, but from the very first moment he arrived, it was almost as if he hadn’t been away. Everyone was pleased to see him, and he wasn’t as far behind as he had feared. He would have extra tutoring over the Christmas vacation, and with a bit of luck he would be at the same level as everyone else by the time he began the next semester.
Surrounded by his friends and swept along by the day’s
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routine—the ringing bells, the slamming doors, and desks—Alex realized that he wasn’t just back at school.
He was back in normal life.
But he had been expecting Alan Blunt to make contact, and sure enough, he had got the call on his cell. Blunt