was darkness. I didn’t know what was worse, not being able to see what it was that had come from beneath the stairs or the terrifying images my mind would create later while I lay in the dark on my own.
Without warning, Sam stopped ahead and I nearly crashed into him.
“How much more noise are you planning on making?” Sam groaned in the darkness. “You’ll have the whole goddamn school awake in a minute!”
“Oh stop your moaning. It wasn’t me who was moving pieces of furniture about back there! Anyway, why’d you stop like that all of a sudden, its pitch bla-”
“Cos we’re here, that’s why,” Sam whispered.
“Where’s here?”
“Miss Clarke’s room,” Sam whispered, and as he swung open the door, a burst of searchlight splashed against the corridor walls again. Sam grabbed my hand again, and pulling me into the room he closed the door behind us.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
The searchlights swept back and forth across the lawns outside Emily Clarke’s bedroom window. I glanced around the room and in the odd flashes of light from outside I could see that the room was furnished very similarly to my own. There was a single bed in the corner, a wardrobe, desk, and a bookshelf, which looked like it was going to collapse under the weight of the books crammed on its shelves.
“That was close,” I sighed, looking into Sam’s eyes.
He stared straight back. His breathing sounded shallow and I could hear his heart racing in his chest again, but something told me that it wasn’t through fear this time. Feeling a little embarrassed by his gaze, I pulled my hand from his, and stepped away.
“So what are we looking for exactly?” Sam asked.
Not wanting him to know that I was looking for the camera that Elizabeth Clarke had told Kiera her sister had hidden, I stepped towards the wardrobe and said, “I’m not sure.”
The room lit up again as the searchlights swept passed the window outside. It was then that I saw the blood. It looked like someone had gone crazy with a paint brush that had been dipped in red paint. Dried blood stained the walls, the ceiling, and the wooden floor in thick streaks and splashes.
“What the fuck…?” Sam breathed in horror seeing the blood for the first time.
I had seen enough of the red stuff to last me a lifetime, but the sight of it made my stomach knot as I thought of how good it tasted. For just the briefest of moments I felt dizzy and swayed backwards, as part of me wanted to start licking the walls clean.
Sam caught hold of me in his arms and held me close. I could hear his heart again and I could tell that he enjoyed holding me. “Are you okay?” he whispered. “I don’t like the sight of blood either.”
“Are you okay?” Sam asked again, as he watched me looking around the room at all the dried blood.
“Sure,” I said, pulling gently away from him.
Sam crossed the room to the desk and started to rummage through the paperwork that was placed there. “Well that’s a surprise,” he whispered into the dark.
“What is?” I asked, peering into the wardrobe.
“Miss Clarke had given Pryor a “D” on his last piece of homework,” he said, thumbing through a workbook. “He really is thick as shit.”
I smiled to myself as I closed the wardrobe door and looked back at the room. Elizabeth had said that Emily had woken to find McCain standing at the foot of her bed.
I crossed the room towards it and started to pull aside the books. Then, I came across a small green light shining from amongst the row of books, which lit up my face like a Halloween mask. The green light seeped from behind a thick leather-bound book. I pulled the book from the shelf, and there was the camera.
“Wassa-matta?” Sam asked, looking over his shoulder and seeing me staring at the bookshelf.
The camera was very small and was one of those that could have easily been hidden in the palm of my hand. It was the type of camera that didn’t take a disc or memory card, but one which you downloaded straight to your laptop. If I could take it without Sam noticing then that would be great. It wasn’t that I didn’t trust him, but the fewer people that knew about it, the better.
“Wassa-matta?” he asked again.
“I’m listening, just in case someone comes down the corridor,” I told him.
“Chill out, will ya? You’re making me nervous,” Sam said.
“I’m making
“He ain’t gonna catch us. You don’t think he lives here, do ya?” Sam scoffed. “He’s probably got some right nice drum somewhere. It’s just us mugs that have to put up with living here. He won’t be back ‘till the morning.”
Sam turned back to the desk. I slipped my hand between the books and tried to free the tiny camera. I could feel wires leading from the back of it. I tried to loosen them with my fingertips, when I heard someone in the corridor outside. Sam must have heard the footsteps too, as he hissed, “Hey! Someone’s coming!”
I drew breath and it made a shallow wheezing sound in the back of my throat. I had been so close to taking that camera. I turned to look at Sam. His eyes were wide.
“What are we gonna do?” Sam panicked.
I scanned the room, searching for a hiding place for the both of us. From the corridor, the sound of approaching footfalls grew louder.
“Under the bed!” I whispered.
“You’re kidding me?” Sam groaned.
Sam seemed to freeze, unable to do anything. Knowing that my friend had become cemented to the spot, I rushed forward and pushed Sam hard in the chest.
“How you ever talked me into this, I do not know!” Sam groaned.
Sam dropped to the floor and rolled underneath, and I followed. Wrapping his arms about himself, Sam curled up, his knees were against his chest and he was taking small, shallow breaths.
“Budge over!” I whispered. “I need some room.”
“Perhaps you’d like to sit on my lap?” Sam said.
“Yeah, very funny. Now move!”
I forced my way into the space and made myself as small as possible. I screwed my eyes shut and prayed that whoever it was coming down the corridor would walk straight past.