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Authors: Sheila Perry

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BOOK: The Petitioners
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He gave a sort of grunt and followed me. As we climbed, we came to slits in the walls, where the cold night air came in, swirling around us. It wasn’t unpleasant after our captivity.

There was another door at the top, but it wasn’t locked. I pushed it open, and gasped.

I was so taken with the little round room, like a fairy-tale illustration, that it took me a while to realise there was somebody on the floor under one of the windows.

I was at her side in a moment, Jeff right behind me.

‘Mum?’ I said.

‘Emma!’ he said sharply.

She opened her eyes to stare at us in the dim light that filtered in through the windows. The moon was up. Her eyes had a scary, blank expression about them, and I almost didn’t want to speak. Then she gave herself a shake, and she was my mother again, though with a hint of terror about her that wasn’t like her at all.

‘I thought they’d killed me,’ she said. She gazed round the room. ‘Just as well you’re here, otherwise I might have thought I was in God’s waiting room or something!’

Yes, this was definitely the real Emma Hepburn. I breathed a long sigh, and took her hand. ‘Are you all right?’

She looked up at Jeff. ‘Are you all right?’

He laughed. ‘OK, that’s enough of that. Where are we going from here?’

‘Don’t ask me,’ she said, trying to heave herself up from the floor. ‘I’m out of my mind on drugs again.’

‘What do you mean, again?’ said a new voice from the staircase behind us. ‘What have you been up to?’

We hadn’t heard any footsteps following us, but now my father and Dan stood framed in the doorway. For a moment our mutual amazement seemed to suspend time. I don’t know how long we spent staring at each other. It was almost like a taste of infinity.

‘Jen!’ said my father, slightly out of breath. ‘Emma!’

‘Gavin!’ said my mother, with a sort of moaning sound.

I went over and flung my arms round Dad. There was no doubt that he was real, anyway. He had called me Jen, and he had that look of a clever man reduced to half-wittedness by events, that was unique to him. Dan grinned at me. I couldn’t remember when he had ever seemed pleased to see me before. Wonders would never cease.

‘What are you doing here?’ I asked. ‘You’re supposed to be on the Pentlands, living off the land and sleeping in some mouldy old hut.’

‘It wasn’t all that mouldy,’ said Dan. ‘Anyway, you and Mum are meant to be in hospital.’

Another man appeared in the doorway behind Dad. For some reason he looked vaguely familiar, although at the same time I couldn’t remember meeting him before.

‘This is Mark Sutherland,’ said Dad, waving a hand towards the man. ‘He’s a cyclist. Mark, my wife Emma and daughter Jen.’

‘We’ve met,’ said Jeff unexpectedly.

Mark lifted a hand and gave a little wave. ‘What a coincidence,’ he said politely. I wasn’t sure if I liked him or not.

‘How on earth do you two know each other?’ I said to my father and Mark.

‘No time for that,’ said Dad. He disentangled himself from me and went over to help Mum to her feet.

He sighed. ‘I thought you were both safe in that hospital. I’d never have let you go otherwise.’

‘It’s not your fault,’ I said. I think it was the secret patient who caused all the trouble.’

‘The secret patient?’ said Dad, patting my mother down as if frisking her for weapons. I knew he was just checking she was really able to stand and walk. ‘Sounds like a good book title.’

‘Come on, we’d better get out of here again,’ said Mark, ‘before all hell breaks loose.’

‘All hell?’ I enquired.

‘Tell you later,’ said my father, holding Mum’s hand in his. I was glad there hadn’t been a mushy scene. But then, they weren’t really like that. And they knew my brother would have made fun of them if they had been all over each other.

‘What’s happened to Declan and Fiona and co?’ I enquired.

‘Later,’ said Dad. He gave my mother’s hand a tug. ‘Are you with us, Sleeping Beauty?’

‘I won’t be with you for long at this rate,’ she told him with a frown that surely must have been faked. She couldn’t be cross with him already.

‘Did you see Mum’s double?’ I asked as we made our way back down the spiral stairs.

Dad nearly tripped over his own feet.

I sighed. There was such a lot to tell them.

 

DAN

 

It was weird seeing Jen and Mum again. I hadn’t expected that when we found an unlocked window and entered the Castle through it. Looking for the others – Declan, Fiona and Will – we had seen somebody disappear through the door to the spiral stairs, and followed them. There must be a story behind Jen and Mum having got here, but there just wasn’t time to listen to it. And what was that about Mum’s double? I didn’t think my sensible sister could be making something up, especially something as mad as that, and yet it sounded a bit unlikely. Anyway, God help us all if there was another version of Mum out there.

We needed to press on with the search for the others and then preferably get out of there before anything kicked off. After our encounter with Tanya Fairfax and her gang, I knew she would start some sort of a fight before too long. She just wouldn’t be able to resist it.

I favoured going up to Spittal of Glenshee and hiding out for a while. If Fiona’s rebels were still around, all the better. They sounded like my kind of people.

Mark Sutherland said we should head for the ballroom end of the castle, which he thought was where all the action would take place. For some reason Jen’s friend Jeff was obsessed with finding another staircase and wanted to carry on towards the other end of the building. He wasn’t too keen on going back the way they had come – apparently he and Jen and this other Mum had all been locked in together and they had only got away by sheer luck. And Jeff’s quick thinking had something to do with their escape, according to my sister. But I could see she thought he was the best thing since cloud computing, so I didn’t want to question this. We’d see how he got on when we came up against something tricky, like…

‘Guards!’ hissed Mark, who had gone on ahead a bit to see how the land lay. He had just opened yet another door to yet another of those inter-connecting rooms that seemed to go on and on. I could imagine Dad complaining they were a nightmare to heat. Mind you, this whole castle must have been a nightmare to heat and to clean. At this point I asked myself who the grumpy old person was who had taken up residence in my head.

Nearly all of us panicked and looked for somewhere to hide, while Jeff stuck his head round the door and then went on through it, striding along nonchalantly as if he were out for a walk in the park. Not Holyrood Park, obviously, as it was under water, but some imaginary park left over from the golden past, of which some people had already begun to forget the downside.

Mark followed him first, maybe to drag him back, but when sounds of hilarity began to arrive from the next room, we all crept away from the walls we had tried to melt into and went forward to see what was going on. Just before I reached the doorway, I wondered if it had really been laughter we had heard or whether it might have been some random sound of the kind people might make if they were being zapped with a hideous new secret weapon, but by then it was too late so I stepped across the threshold anyway.

There was another reunion scene taking place in the room. Declan, Fiona and Will had at last turned up. They were dressed up in generic guard outfits, which explained Mark’s warning. At first sight I might have made the same mistake. Green tunics, green caps pulled down over their foreheads. Little black devices in their hands. It was a while since my time locked in the barracks in Edinburgh Castle but it gave me the shivers just to look at them.

Fiona took off her cap, which helped a bit. ‘We found those in a cloakroom,’ she said. ‘Declan thought they might make us less conspicuous.’

Jeff and Will greeted each other in an understated way.

‘I thought you were still around,’ said Will, not wasting any time on commiserations. ‘I sensed your brain patterns were still active.’

Jeff rubbed the back of his neck thoughtfully. ‘I’m not sure if I like that or if it freaks me out.’

‘Good to see you again,’ said Mum to Will. He glanced at her sideways.

‘I’m getting a kind of echo effect when I look at you,’ he said unexpectedly.

‘What does that mean?’ said my father.

‘I’m not sure. I’m just saying what it feels like. It may not mean anything.’

‘It’s the other one!’ said Jen. ‘I told you.’

Will just sighed.

‘It’s probably just the device malfunctioning,’ he said. ‘It’s only a beta version anyway. It’s bound to go wrong sometimes.’

‘No, there really is another copy of Mum,’ said my sister. ‘I don’t think she’s a complete clone. It’s only her face. They took her away to a meeting or something… A high-level meeting. That was it.’

‘Hmm.’ Mum frowned.  She glanced up at my father. ‘I don’t like the sound of that.’

‘Do you really want to get involved?’ he said.

‘This isn’t the time to stand on the sidelines, Gavin,’ she told him.

They stared at each other for a few moments. I didn’t really believe in telepathy but unspoken communication was definitely taking place.

‘Maybe that’s why Tanya and the troops are here,’ I suggested.

‘Tanya and the troops?’ said Mum, laughing. ‘Is that the latest teenage band?’

‘What do you mean?’ said Jen and I in unison.

‘Sorry to break into this cosy family chat,’ said Jeff, not sounding at all sorry. ‘But now we’ve got hold of Emma, she needs to be at that meeting.’

‘Does anyone know where it is?’ said Mum, looking round at the crowd that we had somehow become.

Will coughed. ‘We could try following the echo.’

In the absence of any other helpful ideas, we ended up doing that. I wasn’t sure why we were trusting these two people Dad and I had only just met, but I suppose Mum and Jen knew them and that should have been good enough for the rest of us. I noticed Declan and Fiona lagged behind the rest of us as we stormed through the Castle, flinging open doors confidently and marching through the rooms like an army on the warpath. Not that Tanya’s own regiment couldn’t have scattered us just by clicking their fingers if we had come face to face with them. We were just amateurs by comparison.

Jeff fell into step beside me and my sister.

‘How did the petition go?’

Jen brought something out of her pocket. It was small and black, like most of these electronic things. Was it a recording device?

‘I haven’t collected any names yet,’ she said. ‘Mum got some while we were waiting here. It’s a bit of a flop really.’

‘What’s all that about?’ I asked.

‘I’ll tell you later.’

‘It’s all right,’ said Will. ‘We’ve been collecting signatures for a while now. At the hospital – round about – people are quite receptive to the idea. I take a recording device with me wherever I go.’

‘There are others too,’ said Jeff.

‘Others?’ I enquired.

‘Other people collecting them,’ said Jeff. ‘I’m not the only envoy.’

I didn’t want to sound like a complete idiot so I didn’t say ‘Envoy?’ in a voice of awe and wonder. I left that kind of thing to my father.

‘Envoy?’ he said, dropping back to join in the conversation. I noticed he still had a firm grip on Mum’s arm. He wasn’t going to let her get away again. I found this quite reassuring.

‘He’s an envoy of the English government,’ said Declan from the back of the procession.

‘Why not say it louder? I don’t think the private army outside will have caught that,’ said Jeff. ‘Yes, I’m here on behalf of the English government. That isn’t a secret. They’ve sent me to start a process we hope will lead to reunion. Any more questions?’

Nobody said ‘Reunion?’ in a voice of awe and wonder. I think we all knew what the word meant.

 

 

GAVIN

 

If anything, I thought Emma was almost in a worse state now than when I had sent her off to that hospital in the first place, which was slightly disheartening. Not that it was entirely my fault. I just knew she had needed to be in a hospital, and there didn’t seem to be a good reliable one any closer than Pitlochry. You’d have thought somebody – the authorities – would set up field hospitals or something similar. But I suppose that was one more sign that government had broken down. We just hadn’t worked out the implications of all these things at first. In retrospect I found the lack of hospitals and even doctors a bit suspicious, considering the previous glut of doctors in Edinburgh which had persisted even through the bad times. Where had they all gone?

‘What’s this about reunion?’ I muttered to Emma when I thought none of the others were listening.

‘It’s just a pipe-dream,’ she said. ‘Jeff thinks if we get enough signatures on this petition of his, we’ll convince all the doubters that we need to revive the United Kingdom.’

‘Will there be doubters?’ I thought about all the devastation we had seen, the inundation of Fife and of other formerly agricultural areas, and the anarchy which allowed rampaging bands to swoop down on people in the night and kill anybody weaker than themselves, and the lack of medical facilities, and the fact that a private army was even now massed on the lawns of Balmoral, quite probably waiting to be told which side to support.

BOOK: The Petitioners
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