by Jon Robinson
Jon Robinson
* * *
SOMEWHERE
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Follow Penguin
Jon Robinson was born in Middlesex in 1983. When he’s not writing, he works for a charity in central London. Find out more about Jon at:
www.facebook.com/jonrobinsonbooks
Books by Jon Robinson
NOWHERE
ANYWHERE
SOMEWHERE
To my readers
Thank you for joining me on this journey
Prologue
A snowstorm lashed at the concrete walls of the prison, rendering the grey stone white. Hidden by acres of surrounding woodland, the building was almost invisible at the best of times. Then again, that’s the whole point, Henry thought, sitting against the wall of the underground cell. His white beard was flecked with blood from wounds inflicted by the guards when they’d caught him, when he’d been helping Jes and Ryan escape.
Luthan won’t just leave me here, he thought. He was sure the Guild would be doing everything they could to free him.
He looked up as the sound of footsteps came down the corridor.
The door opened and Susannah, the teacher, stepped inside.
‘Have you come to gloat?’ Henry said.
‘Felix is dead,’ she said abruptly. ‘And Stephen Nover has taken control of the Pledge. He’s insane …’ She paused, looking around as if someone might overhear. ‘Never mind. That’s not the only reason I came here. Something’s happening to the children. I need your help.’
Henry watched her carefully and nodded.
Susannah looked over her shoulder at the door. ‘Come in,’ she said.
A small frail-looking boy with pale skin entered. His nose was flecked with dried blood.
‘He’s passed out a couple of times,’ Susannah said. ‘He’s been getting quite confused.’
‘I see.’
‘Do you want to examine him or –’
‘I’ve seen enough,’ Henry said.
‘Very well.’ Susannah called to the guard, who appeared at the door. ‘Take this inmate back to his cell.’
The guard nodded and beckoned to the boy, who quickly left. As soon as their footsteps had disappeared, Henry sighed deeply and looked at Susannah, before saying, ‘The Ability is being overused. It’s making them sick. When reality is manipulated on such a scale, like you’re doing here, it causes the brain to just …’ Henry snapped his fingers.
‘What does that mean?’ Susannah asked. ‘What will happen?’
‘The nosebleeds will get worse. So will the blackouts until he’s either lost his mind completely … or he just doesn’t wake up. And not just the children here. My people too. The escaped inmates.’ He stopped and slowly shook his head. ‘It’ll kill them all.’
Susannah said nothing for a few moments. ‘Is there any way of stopping it?’
‘End the project,’ Henry said. ‘At once. Set them free.’
‘There’s nothing I can do,’ she said. ‘If I disobey Stephen, he’ll just get someone else to take my place. He won’t let it end –’
Henry narrowed his eyes. ‘We discovered the Ability, Susannah, all those years ago … and you let it fall into the wrong hands … You gave it to these psychopaths and now we’re all in danger: you, me, the country itself. The children –’
‘I know!’ she hissed, exasperated. ‘But it’s out of my hands now. I’m just as much of a prisoner as you are.’
Before he could answer, she turned and slammed the door shut.
Henry leant his head back against the wall and closed his eyes.
1
A crow flew on to a lamp post and croaked as a car hurtled round the corner, its speakers blaring. The gust of wind blew a plastic bag on to the snow-covered grass. From the outside, the Guild’s building looked like a decrepit block of flats in a south London estate: the last place anyone would expect to find a training school for those who could manipulate reality itself. The only indication was the heavy security gate that barred the front entrance to the building.
Inside the dining room, Luthan, the acting leader of the Guild, studied the group assembled round the table as they ate lunch. A stocky bald man in his early forties with deep-set wrinkles around his eyes, he possessed the intensity of someone who was relishing his opportunity to take charge.
On his right was Elsa, the youngest: small, scrawny, with freckles and frizzy brown hair. The most innocent of the escaped inmates. The most naive, he corrected himself silently. A potential hazard. Jes, an attractive red-haired girl, was sitting beside her and indignantly prodding her lunch. She seemed to be growing more and more angry, but he admired her no-nonsense attitude. If her skill increased, she might some day make a fine member. Ryan, next to her, obviously had feelings for her – only a fool could not see it. But his aggression would need to be kept under control, or he might be a problem.
Luthan then looked over at Julian, a slim boy with dark hair and pointed elfin features. He’d heard tales of how he was clever, but a traitor. Luthan liked to think anyone could change, but, if not, Julian might need to go; the Guild couldn’t risk someone like that among its ranks. But, despite his manipulative streak, Julian seemed less keen on altering reality than the others, to the point of self-righteousness. At the other end of the spectrum was Harlan, a tall, quiet Indian boy who kept himself guarded. He was desperate to join them. Maybe a little too desperate. Luthan noticed he’d been spending an increasing amount of time using the Ability. It seemed like it was starting to become an obsession.
‘Henry is a prisoner in Nowhere,’ said Luthan from the head of the dining table, ‘and the Pledge’s project is still underway. They might think they’re saving the country, but we all know what this is really about … power. And money.’ Luthan paused, as the group took in his words. ‘As long as they are around,’ he continued, ‘none of you will ever be safe.’
‘Neither are the rest of us now they know the Guild ex
ists,’ said Pyra resentfully.
She was in her early twenties, wearing a leather jacket and tattered jeans. Her black hair was short and spiky and fell across one eye. Pyra had joined the Guild at a young age, and she too had taken a while to fit in. Now she was one of the most valuable members of the team. Quick, fearless. Willing to do whatever it took.
Ryan was slouched in his chair with his hood up and his hands in his pockets. He had barely touched his food.
‘What do you think, Ryan?’ said Luthan.
Ryan gave a feeble shrug. ‘Dunno.’
‘This is your future too,’ said Luthan. ‘Giving it some thought might not be such a bad idea.’
‘Look, mate, I don’t know! I don’t know what to say. Yeah, they’re all scumbags. Stephen’s a nutter …’
Luthan leant forward and locked his fingers together. ‘The inmates in Nowhere are forced to watch films containing subliminal messages: a way to harness the Ability without them realizing –’
‘To make things happen,’ Jes interrupted. ‘We know. We were there, remember?’
‘We need to stop the project,’ Luthan said. ‘But to do that we need to get inside.’
‘There’s a tunnel in the yard,’ Harlan said. ‘Was a tunnel. I’m sure it’s been blocked up by now.’
‘All of you are quite sure there’s no other way in?’
The group shook their heads. ‘Place is like a fort,’ said Ryan.
‘And to get into a fort, you need an army,’ Julian offered. ‘And you don’t have one. You’ve only got us. Sorry to break it to you, but Henry’s not getting out of there. And you’re not getting in.’
Half an hour later, everyone had finished eating and went their separate ways, without resolution. After some moments sitting alone, Luthan went into the corridor. When he was certain there was no one around, he walked over to a door in the middle of the corridor and knelt down, removing a small key from a secret compartment in the wooden skirting-board.
He unlocked and opened the door and entered. In the darkness Luthan could just make out the faintest hint of a shape, silhouetted against the wall. ‘Hang on in there,’ he said. ‘I’m doing everything I can to stop it.’
With that, Luthan stepped back outside, locked the door and put the key back inside the panel.
2
After their meal, Jes and Elsa went up on to the roof of the Guild’s building to practise the most basic test given to trainee members: manipulating a coin to land on its side.
‘It’s not working,’ Jes said after yet another failed attempt. She hadn’t kept count, thankfully. It would’ve only depressed her.
She looked over at Elsa, who was enveloped in Pyra’s leather jacket. ‘If I can’t even do this, what good will I be trying to get revenge on the Pledge?’
‘Revenge?’ Elsa looked confused. ‘I thought we were just supposed to be stopping the project and freeing the inmates …’
That too, Jes thought. But, after everything they had been put through, revenge was the more attractive option. She flipped the coin in the air and closed her eyes. It hit the roof, rolled slightly and fell flat.
‘You remind me of me,’ said Elsa. ‘I never thought I’d make it work either!’
She ran over to the roof edge and peered over. On the pavement below an elderly balloon seller, on his way to a children’s party, was struggling to control his colourful jumble of inflatables.
‘I’m going to get myself one of those balloons! Just watch.’ Elsa shut her eyes and whispered ‘blue elephant’, her locus, over and over to help her concentrate.
Jes sighed and folded her arms sceptically. A moment later, a cloud drifted from in front of the sun, causing the misty winter light to glimmer on the surface of the road. A driver missed the traffic light that had just turned red. His car sped through the junction and almost collided with an oncoming vehicle, which in turn careered on to the pavement.
The old man turned and jumped backwards, momentarily letting go of his balloons. He reached up, managing to grasp all of the strings but one. A balloon floated up on a gust of air towards the Guild’s tower block.
Elsa pointed at the balloon, grinning, as it slunk silkily upward. ‘I made that happen. It’s just practice!’
Jes smiled but said nothing. She wasn’t used to being left behind; she had always been popular and socially and academically gifted. Exams came easily to her. She had often felt a pang of guilt around results time, when her friends, who worked far harder than she did, ended up with less to show for it than her. Naturally talented, her parents and teachers had said.
Except now.
‘I’ve been thinking about what happened in the opera house,’ said Elsa.
Jes nodded. ‘I just don’t know what Alyn was thinking. I mean, he was there – with Felix. The leader of the Pledge … the people who put us there! Why?’
‘People change, right?’
‘That’s what scares me,’ Jes said.
She too had changed. She had never been angry – far from it – but ever since they had been taken, the anger had been growing quietly inside her. She had spent months staring at the same grey walls, the same forest shutting them off from the rest of the world, the same shadow of iron bars falling across her while she slept. She wasn’t a bad person – was she? Back home, they’d told her how brilliant she was, and she had lived up to it. But in the prison she’d been told something else: that she was vicious, violent. Dangerous.
‘Things aren’t ever going to be the same, are they?’ she said, gazing as the clouds slipped back across the sun.
Elsa looked at her questioningly.
Jes went on. ‘With us, I mean. We tried to tell everyone in the opera house about the Pledge but no one believed us – they all just thought we were crazy. We’re never going back. This is it now. Us versus them. Even if we get home, things will never be the same as they were. If you think about it like that, I guess you could say the Pledge has won.’
Elsa tried to smile, but it looked more like a grimace.
‘We know why they put us there. But we’re still prisoners, aren’t we? Until they’re all gone, we’ll never be safe.’ Jes looked at Elsa for a response. But Elsa was unscrewing a yellow bottle of children’s bubbles. She dipped the plastic stick inside, raised it to her mouth and blew. ‘You listening, Elsa?’
‘Huh?’
A web of quivering bubbles, gilded with oily blue and green, wobbled slowly across the white sky.
‘Bubbles,’ Jes said, raising an eyebrow. ‘Really …’
Elsa beamed. ‘Yup, Harlan bought me them from the shop.’ She dipped the stick back in and blew again. ‘I told him I always liked to imagine there’s a problem inside each of those bubbles and they’re just blowing away!’ She looked over her shoulder at Jes.
Jes got up and went and sat beside Elsa on the roof edge. She took the plastic stick from her and blew, then laughed.
‘See?’ Elsa said.
‘You’re easily amused,’ Jes said with a look that might have been envy.
Elsa seemed momentarily embarrassed.
‘No, no. It’s a good thing,’ Jes said. ‘Here, let me have another go.’
The two girls sat on the roof side by side, laughing at the bubbles while everything around them was beginning to fall apart.
3
‘So that’s really what it’s all about for you, Stephen?’ said Antonia, the third-ranking member of the Pledge. ‘Money?’
Stephen Nover, the twenty-one-year-old billionaire and new leader of the Pledge, leant back in his chair, his Italian designer shoes resting on the desk’s edge. Beneath them was a newspaper showing a picture of the now-deceased Felix on the front page. To his left sat Lord Blythe, a barrel-shaped aristocrat and the second-wealthiest man in the country.
‘Yes, Antonia,’ he answered coolly. ‘Money. What else would it be about? Truth? Justice? Equality?’ He tipped his head back. ‘Ha! Those are all just words. Meaningless words. Intangible. But money –’
he gazed out of the window, a broad smile creeping across his face – ‘money is real, Antonia. Money is the only thing it’s ever been about!’
‘Semper ad meliora,’ Antonia said coldly. The disdain was clear on her face. ‘It means “ever towards better things”. That’s what we agreed, Stephen.’
‘Yes, when Felix was in charge. And look where that got him!’ He threw his head back, giggling with delight. His movements were floppy and exaggerated, like a child who had not yet mastered control of his limbs.
Antonia watched him silently and started fiddling with her diamond bracelet. ‘There are still six escaped inmates, and this other group – the Guild – who seem to be helping them.’
Blythe scratched his grey moustache. ‘And we have their leader – this Henry fellow, don’t we? They’ll be coming to us. And we’ll be ready for them!’
‘I’ve already made plans at the prison,’ Stephen said. ‘If Susannah Dion is to be trusted, some of my changes will be coming into effect very soon …’
Stephen clasped his hands behind his head, smirking. The solution seemed simple: there were just too many people fighting over too few resources.
‘And if she isn’t to be trusted?’ said Blythe.
Stephen opened his mouth to speak, but stopped. It was true, Susannah had seemed less than thrilled with his plans. If she developed a conscience now, it would be a terrible inconvenience. ‘I’ll have someone watch over her,’ he said, pondering. ‘Just to be on the safe side.’
‘My concern is Felix’s adviser,’ Antonia said. ‘This Emmanuel character. After what he did to Felix …’
‘Quite! I’ve never trusted him either,’ said Blythe, burping into his hand. ‘Always thought there was something strange about him. I told Felix I thought he might be using us all for his own purposes, but the old boy didn’t listen.’
Stephen put a hand to his chin. ‘I’m not going to do anything rash just yet. But leave Emmanuel to me. I’m sure I’ll be able to make him see my point of view.’
‘Felix tried that,’ Blythe answered. ‘Didn’t end well, did it?’