Escape from Camp Boring
Page 1
First published in Great Britain by HarperCollins Children’s Books in 2021
Published in this ebook edition in 2021
HarperCollins Children’s Books is a division of
HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd,
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
www.harpercollins.co.uk
HarperCollinsPublishers
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Text copyright © Tom Mitchell 2021
Illustrations copyright © Robin Boyden 2021
Cover design copyright © HarperCollinsPublishers 2021
Tom Mitchell and Robin Boyden assert the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.
Source ISBN: 9780008403508
Ebook Edition © July 2021 ISBN: 9780008403515
Version: 2021-06-11
To Euan, Bethan and Rhys
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Part One
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
Part Two
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
Part Three
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Part Four
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Footnote
Acknowledgements
Keep Reading …
About the Author
Books by Tom Mitchell
About the Publisher
I hid under a bench at the back, waiting for the others to leave. As they rustled past, not one acknowledged me. They knew what I was doing but they didn’t care. Like when you see wizard-obsessed kids playing nerd cards – they’re not your people; don’t give them a second thought.
The others had more important things to worry about. Namely: lunch. A pat on the back or a quiet nod of understanding might have been nice, but it wasn’t to be. You’re born alone, you die alone, and you only escape a ‘see me after class’ from Dr Andrews on your own.
The key, you see, is to hide until the biology teacher forgets that he said to wait behind. He has a problem with his memory ‘due to eighteen ill-spent months’ in his twenties. Nobody knows what this means.
You might wonder why I didn’t walk out with the rest of the class, hiding in plain sight, disguised by the collective. But Susie Downer tried that once and got a Friday. From behind his whisky-tumbler glasses, Dr Andrews watched the class leave. He stood at the door as he did so, on the other side of the room, to the right of the front-facing desks, past the fume cupboard. He must have once been told that this is what proper teachers do.
With the class gone – well, all but one – Andrews returned to his desk and sighed. I peered round the bench to see him tap at his mouse and frown at his computer. His forehead looked like lined paper and would double in size if he ever relaxed.
To escape I needed the same control you see in movie stars with biceps the circumference of my waist. You know. They pout and they wait. Like comedy and omelettes, it’s all about timing. To hide until Andrews left would be too late – he locks the door. To some kids, being locked in a lab all lunch might sound fun (have you seen how far plastic pipettes can squirt water?) but this kid (me) needed to get to the library to finish his French and so avoid having to stay behind after that lesson too.
Everything depended on the whiteboard.
There remained the scrawled instructions from the start of the test, words on a tombstone. If Dr Andrews followed his teaching manual in this instance, he’d understand the importance of wiping the slate clean before the next period. Once, a biology teacher forgot to remove her notes on human reproduction from the previous lesson. She couldn’t get us back under control for weeks.
If Andrews wiped the board, he’d turn his back and I could video-game crouch from bench to bench to the sink at the side of the room to the door and be away.
I gritted my teeth and watched him with a sniper’s focus, my left eye marginally past the last leg of the back bench, controlled breathing and everything.
‘How about you remember to tell Jamie his mother’s at reception?’ he hissed at the screen.
For a moment I worried that he was about to get involved in a long back-and-forth with the school office about the necessity of effective communication, but, still muttering under his breath, he grabbed the board rubber from his desk and turned.
There! No hesitation! I was off! And despite a backpack with a day’s worth of books and despite shoes that might have been made of iron for all their sneaking suitability, I darted from my bench at the rear of the classroom – yes, darted – to the next row and then the next. If there were a CCTV feed and you were watching, you might have mistaken me for a ghost. Or a mouse, albeit a massive one in a school uniform. (A weird image.) Because I half sprang and half glided, caught in the sweet wind of escape.
Andrews continued wiping the board, moaning about emails as he did. By the time I reached the sink, the open door only a few metres away, I assumed success, and I guessed that it was victory that I could taste, rather than breaktime sour-mix Haribo. I was already thinking about the best way of cheating at French, because surely Andrews wouldn’t mutter if he even suspected there to be a kid in the room.
But assumption has felled empires, lost crowns, got kids Friday detentions.
I swear the second that my foot crossed the threshold from Biology Lab 3 to the science block corridor, Dr Andrews shouted, ‘Stop right there!’
I stopped right there. I didn’t turn. I flinched. I’d heard rumours of him chucking board rubbers. Older school teachers favour them because their soft edges don’t leave a bruise.
‘What do you think you’re doing?’
Slowly I looked over my shoulder, holding on to the faint hope that he was somehow talking to his inbox in an imagined confrontation with the woman in the office – who, in all fairness, is a bit annoying. You try getting an early lunch pass from her.
But no. One hand – the one holding the board rubber – was over his shoulder, looking fully like he was going to launch the thing. At me. The other hand pointed. At me. At my frantic, disappointed heart.
‘Return
to your bench. You’ve some explaining to do.’
‘Take your earphones out,’ Mum snapped, ‘and explain yourself.’
She ambushed me at the front door. She’d have received an automatic email from school, informing her of my Friday after-school detention. She’d have followed my journey home through her phone. This would have provided her with the optimum moment to position herself in the front hall, hands on hips, not disappointed but angry. Having a phone is great and everything, but I could do without Mum using it as a tracking device.
‘Dr Andrews doesn’t teach us. He throws facts at our faces. And whenever anyone complains, he does this evil stare and frowns so hard you think his head will explode,’ I said.
‘We’re not talking about your teacher. We’re talking about you having your earphones in during a test,’ she said. ‘And scoring seventeen per cent. Meaning either you’re bad at biology or really bad at cheating. Were you listening to music again, Will? Honestly?’
‘Honestly?’ I felt the world’s focus fall on me. Or Mum’s at least. ‘Yes. But only because people were being loud and I was trying to concentrate.’
I could hear Robbie, my older brother, moving upstairs. Listening in for sure. He should get in trouble for it. He wouldn’t, though. He never does.
‘Right,’ she said. ‘Okay. Give me your phone.’
Four words to strike terror into the heart of anyone under the age of eighty.
‘But!’ My brain raced. I didn’t want to sound whiny, that wouldn’t work. Think! ‘The calendar app! You know how I use it to get organised, like you told me to. And I’ve already got a detention tomorrow. Nobody should get punished twice for the same crime.’
‘I can do what I want. I’m your mother.’
‘Please. I swear. I’ll never get caught listening to music in class again.’
A single raised eyebrow from Mum. She’s amazingly skilled at communicating through her eyebrows.
‘I mean, it’ll never happen again. Honestly, Mum. Dad would—’
‘Your dad’s not here.’
I tried my puppy face. It’s when you dip your chin and open your eyes as much as possible. For emergencies only. But desperate times call for desperate measures.
‘Mum,’ I said. ‘I love music.’
‘It’s not the music; it’s your phone addiction. If you’re not listening to that noise, you’re tapping away at it, doing I don’t know what. Adults pretend to be kids online. Did you know that?’ (I did know this because she had told me a trillion times.) ‘I read it in this article. Are you listening?’
‘I’m so not addicted!’
‘Well,’ she said, ‘your biology teacher thinks otherwise. And your maths teacher too. And your form tutor. And your geography teacher. And your father. And me.’
If we’re speaking honestly, Mum had only got interested in ‘tech addiction’ after reading an online article. Dad tended to agree with Mum as a relationship-improving technique – not that it worked.
‘Please. One last chance?’
She wavered. There was clear wavering. You could see it in her eyebrow. I increased the intensity of my puppy face: 85 per cent Labrador. Imagining a world without my music … It’d be like fish without chips. Or superheroes without costumes. Trees without leaves.
‘One last chance,’ Mum said. ‘But next time you’re on your phone when you shouldn’t be, getting it confiscated will be the least of your worries. Because next time, Will, I’m sending you to Lonesome Pine Rewild Your Child camp. I read about that too. It’s local.’
As I shook my head, I heard a gasp from Robbie. Coming from upstairs, that’s loud gasping.
Although I did vaguely remember her discussing this camp as if it were something I’d voluntarily want to do, I made like I didn’t. ‘Lonesome Pine Re-what your what?’
‘Lonesome Pine Rewild Your Child. And if you weren’t constantly on your phone already, I’d suggest you Google it.’
‘Rewilding’ sounded painful. Eating nuts and doing yoga, that kind of thing. Advertised by Hollywood actors in Beverly Hills houses on Mum’s Insta feed. Unnatural for boys of my age and appetite. Against our better nature.
‘Now take your shoes off and get changed,’ said Mum. ‘Veggie burgers for dinner.’
Upstairs, I checked my phone’s charge. 33 per cent. I felt similar. And Mum’s burgers were unlikely to help. Sighing, I pulled off my school uniform.
Back when Dad lived with us, we’d sit round the table for dinner. No technology was allowed, parents included. This stopped after Dad lifted his bike on to the table, to fix the chain or something, and the legs collapsed. (He moved out not long after. ‘I love you, Greg, but you’re like a tornado!’ Mum had said.) Relocating to the sofa and armchairs was meant to be a temporary thing. Putting on the TV too. But, one dinner, Robbie said that he enjoyed being able to ‘share this experience’ (watching the news) with Mum. Mum agreed. We stayed.
‘It used to be a thing,’ Mum had said, speaking over the TV. ‘A community thing. People welcomed neighbours from all around to witness momentous occasions.’
Robbie had responded, ‘Like you and Sue and Love Island?’ and Mum had made like she hadn’t heard. Okay, so he could be funny. Sometimes.
We were still meant to leave our phones in our rooms, though. That was one of Mum’s rules.
But what difference would it make if I left it in my pocket? I mean, what was the worst that could happen? It wasn’t as if I’d ever get the phone out. I’m not a complete idiot. Maybe, you know, just 75 per cent.
‘What exactly do you have to do?’ Mum asked Robbie.
She sat in her armchair, off to the left of us. Me and Robbie sat tight on the small sofa. Our elbows collided each time we tried cutting the meat-free burgers, no buns, the plates balanced on our knees. The TV, directly in front, told of all the ways that American politicians were destroying our future.
Robbie ate his meals in a particular way, splitting up the different elements and eating the sections one by one. Every day, I found it needles-behind-fingernails annoying. Mum didn’t care because he’d always finish his food, which was something you couldn’t say for me.
‘Submit my final project,’ Robbie replied. ‘Anyway, what’s this rewilding camp I heard you talking about? It sounds … troubling.’
Did he wink at me? Was that a wink? Who winks? And it was a good job that I didn’t have a problem with my temper or I might have accidentally thrown my burger at his face. I mean, he was so on his phone more than me. What was her name? Anne, was it? Nobody ever remembered.
Mum had a spot of mayonnaise in the corner of her mouth. Inevitably she didn’t notice the wink. ‘It’s where your brother will be going if he’s caught with his phone out when it shouldn’t be.’
And my phone, in my pocket, vibrated. The horror, the horror.
I stopped chewing. Maybe it was a ghost alert? Maybe, being crammed so tightly on the sofa meant that my thigh muscle had tremored? But no. My thigh could never be so rhythmic. Why hadn’t I left it on silent? Could Mum hear the vibration? There I sat, tortured by questions. I should have left it charging, safe on my bed. Maybe I was a 100 per cent idiot.
‘It only happened in biology – one lesson,’ I said quickly, adjusting my plate so it covered my left pocket and trying not to look guilty, which is the worst thing you can attempt when you are guilty. I’m not sure my defence was that impressive either.
‘Dr Andrews?’ said Robbie. ‘I can’t imagine he’s a fan of eighties hip-hop.’
‘I mean …’ I said, ‘it’s nineties. And Tribe had an album out in 2016. Anyway, he didn’t believe that I was listening to music. He thought someone was transmitting the answers.’
Robbie chuckled.
‘Right,’ said Mum, the word signalling that she was abandoning me. ‘Are you organised for next Thursday, Robbie? Forget about your silly brother.’
(That stung.)
Robbie’s Instagram said that he was an artist. And, in fairnes
s, he was doing a foundation art course at college. It was meant to bridge the gap between school, where you don’t learn anything, and studying art properly at university, where you do. It lasted a year. Despite living at home, he was fully committed; he’d even had his ear pierced. Dad said it made him look like a pirate. Mum said it made him look like William Shakespeare. I thought he looked fairly cool, but I’d never admit that, especially as I knew exactly the reaction I’d get if I’d had my ear pierced. They wouldn’t be comparing me to a famous writer, I can tell you that.
‘All I need to do is take my external hard drive to college, upload the files, and that’s it. It’s like handing in an essay. And then they have a look and then they decide.’
‘Decide what exactly?’ Mum asked.
My phone vibrated again. For sure. Multiple messages. I still had a mound of sweet potato to finish and a good wedge of burger. There was no way I could check without being caught. I was 1,000 per cent an idiot for even considering it.
‘Everything okay, Will?’ asked Mum.
‘I’m just going to go to the toilet,’ I said, but too speedily.
I’d have been more convincing if I was sitting under a neon sign that said LIAR.
‘No, you’re not,’ said Mum. ‘You’re not escaping that easily. Don’t think I’ve forgotten the trip to the toilet that lasted three hours. Finish your food.’
I mean, that was the sensible solution. All I needed to do was eat up the stodge that sat thickly on my lap and, in ten minutes’ time, I could collapse on to my bed to check whatever had been sent through. But there was … so … much … stodge. We’d hardly started. It occupied my plate as invitingly as a party of massacred slugs.
I reasoned it was probably only the local Domino’s texting a discount. I should just relax. Or maybe it was Dev sending a dank meme. Or Hudson moaning about homework. Or Nathan asking if we fancied a game of Among Us. But … still … it could wait. Be still my phone.
‘What do they decide, Robbie?’ Mum persisted.
Robbie looked at me and rolled his eyes. ‘Mum, I’ve told you this, like, a hundred times. They decide whether I pass or fail my foundation degree. Or, you know, get a merit or distinction.’