Hamish X and the Cheese Pirates (8 page)

BOOK: Hamish X and the Cheese Pirates
12.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Comptesse raised her face from her hands and saw the owner of the commanding voice.

He was tall and broad in the shoulders, outlined against the firelight in silhouette. She couldn't make out his facial features, but a broad-brimmed hat framed his head with a bedraggled ostrich feather sticking out of it. He exuded menace and the rank stench of rancid dairy products. The source of the stench was the thick, matted beard that hung stiffly from his chin, covering his chest completely. The beard was solid with melted cheese, glistening and greasy.

The Comptesse screamed, “Who are you? Why are you here? What do you want of me?” She began to weep again.

The shadowy man cocked his head towards her.

“To answer your questions in the order they were presented,” he began. He held up a finger. “One: we are Cheese Pirates.” He held up a second finger. “Two: we are here for your cheese.” He held up a third finger that was missing its tip, ending in a scarred knob at the first knuckle. “Three,” he said, “we want you to come with us.”

Hoots of laughter went up from all the pirates. The Comptesse screamed herself hoarse. A shadow blocked out the stars. She stopped screaming long enough to see that something huge obscured the moon and the few stars peeking through the clouds. She heard the thrum of engines.

Chapter 8

The next morning, the klaxon sounded at seven. The lights came on, long racks of heartless fluorescent tubes flickering to life. The light of a fluorescent bulb is specially designed to discourage optimism and dampen the spirits of children,
36
and these lights excelled at their allotted task.

When Mimi woke up she found that Hamish was already dressed. He wore his new pair of overalls but still had the same huge boots on. The cuffs of the overalls had been cut along the seams to accommodate the boots. He sat on his cot, rucksack plunked down on the floor at his feet. A huge book rested on his knees. He was poring through the pages with intense concentration, his golden eyes flicking back and forth.

Mimi was feeling a bit tired from all the dangling the night before. She propped herself up on one elbow and looked at Hamish X's boots. They were marvellously smooth and shiny. Hamish X sensed Mimi looking at him.

“Good morning, Mimi.” Hamish X smiled.

“Nothin' particularly good about it,” Mimi grumbled sleepily. “Just don't puke on me.”

Parveen returned from the common room. He spent a lot of time there studying whatever reading material he could get. Mrs. Francis saw that he got all of Viggo's discarded magazines and newspapers as well as whatever used books she could find. She also made sure scraps of paper and pencils found their way into Parveen's hands. He currently carried a wad of scrap paper. Seeing Mimi and Hamish X awake, he tucked his pencil back behind his right ear. “Hello,” Parveen said. “Did the bowl kites function as I intended?”

“Perfectly.” Hamish X slapped Parveen on the back heartily. The little boy winced.

“The porridge was a bit of a waste though,” Mimi laughed.

She described the scene at the door to the cafeteria in detail. Parveen listened in silence to the tale. When it was finished, he turned to Hamish X.

“Voluntary projectile reverse peristalsis,” he said. “Fascinating.”

“Messy, too,” Mimi laughed again.

“You stole a keycard,” Parveen said, his brow creased in a serious expression much too old for his little brown face. “Such actions are extremely dangerous. They can lead to a lot of trouble.”

“Borrowed,” Hamish X corrected. “Dangerous but necessary.”

Parveen immediately stepped closer to examine the book on Hamish X's lap, leaning closer to read the title.

“Great Plumbers and Their Exploits?”
37

“My mother left it with me,” Hamish explained. “I read from it every day. I'm sure my mother hid a message for me in it somewhere. If I can just figure it out, I'll be able to find her one day.”

“Your mother?” Mimi said. “I thought you was an orphan.”

“Only for the purpose of official classification,” Hamish said breezily. “She was forced to leave me at an
orphanage but she left me the book as a clue to where I would find her.”

“Well, I don't mean to be the squirrel in the peanut butter, but if she's still out there somewheres, why doesn't
she
come and find
you
?” Mimi asked.

Hamish X's face darkened and his strange eyes flashed. “Because she can't. I have to find her! That's the way it has to be!” he snapped.

Mimi flinched. “Whatever you say! Don't get yerself in a lather!”

As quickly as his anger came, it went away again. Hamish X smiled sheepishly. “I'm sorry. I'm a little sensitive about Mother.”

“Well, how come you haven't managed to crack the code? In all these years?”

“If it was easy to crack, it would hardly be a secret code, would it?”

Mimi had no answer to that.

Parveen bent over the book, examining it minutely through his thick glasses. He looked at Hamish.

“May I?” he asked.

Hamish X narrowed his eyes and clutched the book tightly. Parveen held out his open hands. “I promise I'll give it right back.” Hamish X hesitated a moment longer, then handed the book to Parveen.

Parveen ran his hands over the cover. The book was bound in leather and inlaid with gold leaf. It would have been very valuable had its subject not been so obviously boring. Parveen carefully opened the cover and flipped through the pages. There were diagrams and black ink illustrations throughout. The print was fine and dense. Parveen studied the book silently for a moment. “I would very much like to examine this at leisure, Hamish X.
Perhaps I could help you decipher something, given time.”

Hamish X shook his head, snatching the book back. “Only I can crack the code. I have to do it alone.” He placed the book on his cot. Then he picked up the rucksack and dumped the rest of his belongings onto the scratchy grey flannel blanket that covered the bed.

“Not a lot to show for myself,” he said, looking at the meagre bundle of possessions. “Just these things and, of course, my boots.” He plunked them on the floor: one, two.

“May I?” Parveen asked again, pulling a magnifying glass out of the pocket of his overalls.

Hamish X smiled. “Be my guest.”

Parveen spent the next five minutes examining the strange boots in detail. He tapped them. He stroked them. He lifted each one and looked at the knobby soles. Finally, he sat back on his heels. “Where did you get them?” he asked.

“I don't remember exactly,” Hamish said. “It sounds weird but … I've always had them. I can't remember a time when they weren't on my feet.” He laughed.

“C'mon,” Mimi scoffed. “You tryin' to tell us those boots grow with ya?”

“That's exactly what I'm trying to tell you, Mimi. And what's even weirder is, I've never, ever taken them off.”

“You've never seen your own feet?” Parveen's eyes were wide behind his glasses, which made him look even more owlish. “That is truly disturbing!”

“How is it even possible?” Mimi said. “How can boots grow?”

Hamish X shrugged. “I only know what I've seen with my own eyes. They're my best friends, these boots!” He
slapped the shiny black footwear. “They've been with me through thick and thin. I like to think maybe a wizard put them on me. That they're magic or something.”

“Whatever!” Mimi rolled her eyes. “Got any other surprises?”

He looked around him to check that they weren't being watched. All the children were in the cafeteria and the one guard, Hammerface, was dozing in a chair by the wall.

“Just this,” he whispered.

Hamish stuffed the fingers of his right hand down the side of his right boot. With a flourish like a magician in a stage show, he produced a bulky Swiss Army pocketknife.

The knife looked like most Swiss Army knives; red on the sides with an inlaid Swiss Cross, utensils neatly folded into the centre. The only difference was in the number of utensils: there were too many to count. The knife practically bristled with them. The strange thing was that the knife didn't seem to weigh as much as it should considering all the bits folded into it.

“Nice knife,” Parveen whispered, awestruck. He loved tools and gadgets of any description, but this knife was a thing of beauty.

“How did you git that past the metal detector?” Mimi asked incredulously.

“It must be made of a non-metallic alloy that the detectors can't pick up,” Parveen said. Hamish X tossed it to him. The smaller boy held the knife cradled in his brown hands like a priceless treasure.

“It was given to me by the King of Switzerland,” Hamish X said, a strange look coming over his face. “I'm supposed to give it back to him one day.”

“Switzerland is a republic,” Parveen said. “They don't have a king.”

“Yeah, they do. He gave me this.” Hamish X took the knife back and held it up so that it sparkled in the fluorescent lights of the dormitory. “There's a corkscrew, a screwdriver, a boning knife, a saw, a magnifying glass, a pair of scissors, a spatula for flipping tiny pancakes, a spoon, a fork, three different knives … There are lots more but I haven't had the time to look for them yet.”

He stuffed the knife back into his boot and sat on the edge of his cot.

“Why didn't you use it last night?” Mimi demanded. “You could have cut us loose!”

“Sure,” Hamish X shrugged. “Then what? We'd have been blown like leaves across the freezing tundra. No, I needed that time to sound out whom I could trust in this dump. I know I can trust you, Mimi. You pack a punch but you're honest and true.”

Mimi blushed. Hamish X turned to Parveen.

“You were willing to risk getting into trouble to bring us that food. And those little bowl kites have inspired me. I think I'll take you with me, too.”

“What do you mean?” Parveen asked. “Where are you going?”

“Isn't it obvious?” Hamish smiled. “I'm going to escape and you're both coming with me.”

Parveen and Mimi sat in stunned silence. Finally, Mimi shook her head.

“It's impossible,” she whispered. “There are too many guards.”

“Stupid guards,” Hamish pointed out.

“And dogs,” Parveen added.

“I have a way with animals.”

“And even if you get past them,” Mimi insisted, “there's the electric fence. You'll be fried for sure.”

“It is very, very electrical,” Parveen said simply. “Probably a million volts.”

“Electrical fences are a personal favourite of mine,” Hamish X said airily.

“And even if ya did get out,” Mimi reasoned, “where would ya go? The nearest town is nine hunnert kilometres away across a frozen wasteland. If the bears don't eat ya,
38
you'll freeze to death.”

“Now that's the most fun part of the whole plan.” Hamish smiled and patted Parveen on the back, not so hard this time. “And I have Parveen to thank for that.”

“Me?” Parveen said nervously.

“You,” Hamish X confirmed. “Just be ready when the time comes.”

Mimi couldn't help herself. “Is it gonna be soon?”

“As soon as possible,” Hamish X nodded.

Parveen shook his head. “I find it very hard to believe that there is any possible escape from this place. I am resigned to wait out the years until I am fourteen and then I will be removed from here to live a productive life perhaps working for an electronics firm.”

“How do ya know they'll let ya go after ya turn fourteen, huh? The ODA come and pick ya up and then yer never seen again!” Mimi realized she was talking loudly. She looked around and continued in a whisper. “I fer one don't wanna wait. Hamish X, are you shore we can git out?”

“Trust me,” Hamish said. “Can you?”

Mimi and Parveen exchanged a look. “I won't go without ya, Parv.”

Parveen sat looking at Hamish X for a long moment. When he finally spoke, he asked a strange question. “You're quite certain you don't know how old you are?”

Hamish X thought about it. “I think I'm about ten years old. Why?”

Parveen looked hard at Hamish X for a few seconds before he put away his magnifying glass. “You don't seem to know very much about yourself at all,” he said. “Yet you expect me to trust you?”

Hamish X hung his head. “I know. You're right.” He raised his golden eyes to Parveen and then to Mimi. “There are holes in my memory. It scares me a bit. People tell me about the things I've done and the places I've been … And I don't really remember them clearly. It's like they happened to somebody else. There are things I can't explain. My boots, for example. Things I'm able to do that I don't remember learning. It's all kind of weird.” Hamish X reached out and grabbed Mimi and Parveen by the hand. He looked up into their faces with an intensity that was almost frightening. “But I promise you, I can get us out of here. I'd like to take everyone with us, but Windcity is too remote … too dangerous. I can only take you two. Do you trust me?”

Other books

Victim of Love by Darien Cox
Flawfully Wedded Wives by Shana Burton
A Baron in Her Bed by Maggi Andersen
Dead Streets by Waggoner, Tim
Poser by Cambria Hebert
Forced Out by Stephen Frey
Pynter Bender by Jacob Ross