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My ‘principal’, Ronnie, had scuttled himself into a corner at the first sign of violence. He was now cursing with great fluidity and vigour for a man who only moments earlier had been pretending to be at death’s door.

Rebanks and Blakemore had come charging through the doorway in sync by this time, flicking on the overhead lights. Blakemore went and pulled the balaclava off the inert figure on the sofa, bending over him to take the pulse at his throat. I recognised Todd. Strangely detached, I registered the blood around his nose and mouth.

“Get a medic in here,” Blakemore told Ronnie. The cook clambered to his feet, dropping the offal that had been standing in for his guts into the waste bin as he went out.

Blakemore stared at me and his eyes were still very bright. I saw a feral excitement in them, and it sickened me. I looked away, ashamed. The smell of violence hung in the air dull and bitter, like burnt plastic.

Rebanks put his hand on my shoulder. “Are you OK?”

I swallowed, nodded, not trusting myself to speech. He carefully prised the telephone out of my clenched fingers and inspected it. Blood was smeared up one side.

He murmured, “Now what was that all about, hmm?”

I let out a shaky breath, shrugged his hand away. I was beginning to come round, to snap out of it. “Well,” I said, aiming for a relaxed tone, almost bringing it off, “you know what they say – it’s good to talk.”

He nearly made it to a smile, twisted into mocking. “In that case,” he said, “remind me not to have a conversation with you.”

His eyes had dropped from my face and I realised that Todd must have ripped my shirt collar, although I didn’t remember him doing it. The material was gaping open across my shoulder, revealing the scar in all its lurid glory.

Rebanks’s gaze lingered in that direction and when it shifted up to my face again, his expression was cool and calculating.

Ronnie returned with Figgis in tow, who went quickly to deal with Todd. Major Gilby wasn’t far behind.

“What the hell happened here?” he demanded as he stalked in. His eyes flicked to my neck, then to my face, and back again.

Rebanks lifted the telephone. “Old Toddy went in a bit heavy and Charlie here made a collect call,” he said, laconic.

The Major’s nostrils grew pinched. “This is not a laughing matter,” he snapped with a glance at Todd’s unconscious figure. He jerked his head to Blakemore. “My study, the pair of you. Now.” He favoured me with a last brooding stare. “You too, Miss Fox, if you don’t mind.”

***

“I think perhaps that you have some explaining to do, Miss Fox,” Gilby said when the four of us were closeted in his inner sanctum.

I was in the centre of the room, trying to resist the urge to stand to attention. The other two men were slightly behind me, with Blakemore lounging against the door jamb and Rebanks slumped in an armchair with his legs stretched out straight before him.

The Major was sitting stiffly behind a desk not unlike the one in the simulation, although its surface was covered in a more realistic clutter of papers. He fidgeted a little, I noticed, straightening papers that were already neat, tidying a set of keys into a top drawer. He had an old-fashioned letter spike by his left hand and I noted its position almost unconsciously.

I could feel the location of all of the school men, without having to look. If things went bad I could estimate exactly how long it would take them to react and reach me. The fact that I was even beginning to think that way scared me to death.

“Todd should have kept his hands to himself,” I said now, my tone on the defiant side.

“Very probably,” Gilby said. He repositioned the leather blotter so that the corners were precisely aligned. “Although I would hazard a guess that you overreacted somewhat.”

“That,” I said coldly, “is a matter of opinion. Anyone who expects me to lie there and put up with him feeling me up has another think coming.”

“Difficult to think when you’ve got concussion,” Gilby rapped back. “Is that what happened when you had your throat cut?”

The sudden unexpectedness of the question took my breath away. I couldn’t pull back the gasp his words provoked, nor could I speak.

“What do you mean, she had her throat cut?” Blakemore demanded. He moved away from the door, circled me with his eyes fixed on my jugular like a starving vampire. I did my best to ignore him.

Gilby nodded towards my neck. “That scar’s not surgical,” he said. He put his head on one side slightly, pursing his lips. “Knife, by the looks of it. A big one with a serrated blade. I would say you were damned lucky.”

I felt my shoulders drop. “Yes,” I said, “I was.”

Gilby ducked his head, a small nod as though recognising my capitulation. “Thank you, Miss Fox,” he said, gracious as a snake before it strikes. “Tell me, did this happen before or after you left the army?”

Now that had to be a stab in the dark. No way could he have known about that. Sean had promised me.

“What makes you think I’ve ever been in the army?” I stalled.

It was Rebanks who spoke, lazily throwing my own words back at me. “When we’d finished shooting yesterday you came straight out with, ‘I have no live rounds or empty cases in my possession, sir,’ without having to be told, didn’t you?” he repeated with a grin. “It’s a standard army range declaration, babe. No reason for you to have known it unless you were in.”

He grinned at my consternation. “And before you try that excuse again, you must know as well as I do that the TA don’t let you loose with weapons on any old open day. Not until you’ve been through basic training.” He shrugged. “Sorry.”

“So, Miss Fox, time to make a clean breast of it, don’t you think?” Gilby said, brisk, but with a deceptive mildness.

“Yes, I was in,” I said. “But the army didn’t suit me, and I didn’t suit the army. They chucked me out.”

“Why?”

I hesitated. I was faced with three choices. An outright lie, which I hadn’t prepared for and couldn’t sustain for long enough to be convincing. I could tell them about Sean, which would be embarrassing, but probably believable. Or I could tell them the truth. I almost flinched at the thought of it.

“I had a fling with one of my instructors,” I said at last, feeling my face colouring. “It didn’t go down too well.”

Rebanks looked me up and down slowly, insultingly. “Oh but I’m sure you did,” he murmured.

The Major silenced him with a look of intense distaste and continued to stare at me for a while. I just hoped there was enough truth showing in what I’d said for him to accept it. Still, he was the type who was predisposed to believe that I’d done something so predictably female, so stupid.

In the end, he nodded. “All right, Miss Fox, we’ll overlook this one, but if I find out that there’s anything else you haven’t been telling us, you’ll be in more trouble than you can imagine. Is that understood?”

“Yes sir,” I said, resisting the urge to salute.

So, what had Kirk found out that he wasn’t supposed to know? Was that the kind of trouble the Major had in mind? The thought made my skin go suddenly cold and start to prickle.

“All right,” Gilby said, glancing at his men in dismissal. “Now get her out of here.”

***

Rebanks took me down the corridor to the students’ mess hall where the others who’d been through the exercise were waiting. Shirley took one look at my face and my torn shirt, and came to put her arm round my shoulder.

“What on earth happened to you, lovey?” she demanded.