Dad was a strong man, Richard thought. He’d seen his father’s medals. Anyone who laughed at him would be duffed up good and proper.
He stood and dressed hastily. The school uniform felt as crappy as always, even though it was the last day he’d have to wear it. Grey trousers, grey shirt, grey jumper, grey socks…he’d rebelled, just slightly, by wearing black underpants. Rumour had it the girls wore all sorts of underclothes under their jumpers, but Richard didn’t believe it. Wearing the wrong uniform wasn’t a harmless little prank like plagiarism, bullying, and drawing insulting caricatures of the headmaster in the bogs. It was serious. Any girl who wore the wrong underwear would be lucky if she was merely sent to a borstal.
His reflection looked back at him as he gazed into the mirror, feeling a twinge of disgust at his appearance. He was just a little overweight, enough to be noticeable; his blond hair fell over a pudgy face that had yet to lose its baby fat. He was condemned to six hours of PE a week, thanks to the school-to-military pipeline, but it hadn’t done much for his weight. Richard was honest enough to admit he hadn’t put much effort into it, yet…he’d never felt the urge to engage in any sporting activities. What was the point?
He walked downstairs, telling himself that today would be different. He was getting his exam results—the exam results he’d slaved so hard to get. He’d already applied to a set of proper universities, places where intellect was respected and barbaric physical sports simply didn’t exist. He’d meet people who actually understood him, he told himself; he’d meet intellectuals who could actually challenge his thinking. And, most importantly of all, he wouldn’t be conscripted into the Army. He wouldn’t be called upon to fight in the war.
The radio was blaring loudly as he stepped into the kitchen. Something had happened…he caught snatches of babble about places he’d never visit and things he’d never see as he picked up a bowl and filled it with porridge. His sister Elizabeth was seated at the table, reading a datapad as she finished her breakfast. She was two years younger than him, with long blond hair that was strikingly attractive when she wasn’t wearing the school uniform. He hoped she’d be fine once he left for university. She was smart. She’d have a good life if she didn’t let someone sweep her off her feet. Richard sometimes wondered if that was what had happened to his mother.
“Better not be late today,” Elizabeth advised. “You know how the Beast gets when someone’s late for assembly.”
“Better to skip it altogether,” Richard said, as he sat down and started to eat. “It’ll just be another boring lecture about who died and brought honour to the school.”
He ate quickly, knowing better than to press his luck. The Beast—Headmaster Gordon—was a former military officer who had no qualms about meting out harsh punishment to boys and girls alike. Some people claimed he’d been kicked out of the Army for unacceptable brutality. Richard didn’t believe it. He’d always thought that unacceptable brutality was the way people got ahead in the Army. Richard had once spent several hours trying to match the headmaster’s name to the Army lists, only to draw a blank. He had a private theory the headmaster was a Walt, a poser, but he’d kept it to himself. The Beast wouldn’t have hesitated to beat him if he’d heard even a hint of the theory.
“Don’t forget your bag!” his mother shouted from up the stairs. “And go now!”
Richard groaned, grabbed his coat and bag, and hurried to the door. The black mark on it signified that someone in the family had made the ultimate sacrifice and given his life for his country, but no one outside the family itself seemed to care. Too many men—and women—had given their lives in the last five years of war. Richard wanted his father back, not a meaningless medal and a fatherless life. His greatest fear, the one he wouldn’t admit to anyone, was that he would end up just like his father.
Elizabeth joined him as they half-ran onto the street and joined the others heading to school, a stream of grey-clad teenagers who blurred together into a single mass. Richard tried not to react when he spotted a handful of sporty kids amongst the throng, chatting happily as they tossed a ball during the walk to school. He’d long since grown used to being picked last for teams—he’d never liked sports—but he would have been happier if they left him alone. They actually liked school, somehow. They saw sporting careers as their only way out of poverty. Richard had looked it up when one of the school bullies had bragged he’d be playing for a famous team within the year. The odds of him succeeding—of anyone succeeding—were lower than the odds of winning the lottery.
The throng grew larger as the school came into view. Richard glanced at his sister, then waved goodbye and headed towards the boy’s side of the playground. The handful of climbing frames looked as cracked and broken as ever, despite endless promises from the council to repair them. He’d never dared climb to the top, not when there was no shortage of wankers who’d try to pull him down. The concrete below the frame promised a hard landing and a week or two in hospital for anyone unlucky enough to fall. Richard had heard PE teachers claim that suffering built character, but he wasn’t going to risk it. He already had quite enough character.
A couple of boys kissed their girlfriends, then ran towards the growing lines as the school bell rang. Richard felt a stab of envy, mingled with an odd sense of disdain. He’d promised himself that he wouldn’t remain trapped in the grim town, that he’d find a job and build a life for himself somewhere else. London perhaps, or Edinburgh. Or even Manchester, somewhere where there were jobs for intelligent students too smart to waste their time playing games. He joined the line as the whistle blew, ducking his head to avoid catching the teacher’s eye. The teacher at the door was already holding a datapad, ready to record the names of anyone who came late. They’d be for the high jump at the end of the day.
It’s the last day of school, he thought, as the line began to move. Can’t they give us a break?
The door loomed in front of him, a solid metal structure that looked as if it belonged in a prison. The school really was a prison…he winced as he pressed his hand against the bioscanner, trying to ignore the prick of pain as the scanner sampled his blood and pronounced him clean. He’d always wondered what would happen if the scanner reported he did have the alien virus, although he was pretty certain it was just security theatre to keep the proles under control. The virus was airborne. If he had it, he’d have infected the entire line of prattling boys by now. He’d read as much on the dark web.
Richard tried to breathe through his nose as he stepped through the door, into the school, and walked down the corridor to the assembly hall. The school stank of stale cabbages and quiet desperation, and the sense that most of the students wouldn’t go on to long and prosperous careers. The smell grew stronger—the stench of too many sweaty bodies in too close proximity—as he found a place in line and sat down. There were no seats in the hall, not even for the older students. He’d heard the teachers were scared of having chairs hurled at them. He would have liked to believe the rumour, but it was probably another cost-cutting measure. The assembly hall did double duty as the indoor gym.
A figure sat down next to him and sniggered. “Hey, dickhead!”
Richard groaned inwardly. Colin. He hated Colin. The asshole didn’t have a single working brain cell, as far as Richard could tell, but that didn’t stop him leading a charmed life. Girls loved him; teachers made allowances for him…he wouldn’t have been allowed to get away with so much if he hadn’t been a star on the sports field. Richard was sure Colin would have been expelled by now if he hadn’t brought in the medals. Colin was too stupid to know it, but his charmed life wouldn’t last. He wouldn’t go on to fame and glory, not if there was any justice in the world. Or so Richard told himself.
He did his best to ignore the taunts as the remainder of the students filed into the vast chamber. Really, did Colin think he was the first person to remember that Dick was short for Richard? Or that dick was slang for penis? He probably did. He wasn’t smart enough to realise t
he joke was older than the Beast himself, older than the oldest person still alive. Richard hated his name more than he cared to admit. He intended to change it as soon as he got his majority.
The Beast stepped onto the stage, his mortarboard so perfect he could have stepped off a recruiting poster for schoolteachers. He was a sour-faced man, his long black robes cut to hint at his powerful body. Richard did his best to pretend to pay attention as the headmaster started to speak, praising the former pupils who’d given their lives in battle against the alien foe. Richard winced inwardly when the Beast mentioned a handful of familiar names. It wasn’t common to know students who were more than a couple of years older or younger than oneself, but he’d known a handful of older boys on the block. Two of them were now dead according to the Beast. Richard would have liked to think he was lying. It wouldn’t be the first time the headmaster had lied to the school.
The speech went on and on, to the point that even the teachers started to look bored. Richard amused himself by mulling over the Beast’s military credentials, wondering if the headmaster really had been in the Army after all. If he’d been a high-ranking officer, surely he would have kept the title…right? He’d openly claimed to have killed men in combat. Maybe he’d just been a cook, a cook who’d poisoned the poor bastards who’d had to eat his food. He’d seen that joke in a TV series that had been banned long ago.
He was relieved beyond words when, after a cursory and compulsory rendition of God Save The Queen, the younger students were dismissed. The older students waited, shuffling uncomfortably as the Beast informed them that their exam results had been returned from the board and some of them had interviews with guidance counsellors. Or consolers. Richard groaned at the pun, then managed a fake titter with the rest of the students. The Beast had earned his nickname, whatever the truth behind his military service. It wouldn’t do to draw his attention on the final day of school.
“And I trust, when you have made something of yourselves, that you will remember what made you,” the Beast said. “Dismissed.”
I’ll remember you, all right, Richard thought as he stood. The headmaster had no shame. It was really too early to start hitting them up for donations. And I’ll donate a rusty penny if you try asking me for money.
He held back as the students tried to cram themselves through the doors and push their way into the lobby. There was no point in running, not when he was already in the midst of the crowd. Instead, he forced himself to calm down as he followed the rest of the students up the stairs, past classrooms they’d never have to enter again, and down a corridor to the notice boards. The building really did look like a panopticon prison. A man standing on the top could look down at the lobby without being seen by the people below him. But there were laws against treating prisoners so badly. Richard had once considered trying to make a formal protest. Being sent to school in such a building probably constituted cruel and unusual punishment. He hadn’t bothered, in the end. It was unlikely that anyone would pay more than a moment’s attention to him.
He felt his heart twist as he made his way down the corridor. It would have been nice to have friends; it would have been nice to have someone he could be himself around…he shook his head. It would have been nice, yes. And while he was wishing, he’d like a pony. He glanced up at the library, his hiding place while classes were out of session. He couldn’t wait to go to university. He’d sell his soul for the chance to actually make something of himself.
Colin waved at him. “I’m going to the Army! And I’m going to shoot assholes like you!”
Richard bit down the reply that came to mind. Colin was good at mindless brutality. No doubt he’d fit right in. Richard was a more sensitive soul. He ignored the whoops and cheers as Colin and his friends headed for the exit, ready to spend a week of freedom before they reported for training. They didn’t matter. All that mattered right now was getting out of the dump before the poverty sucked him back in. He told himself firmly that he’d made it.
He found the exam results and skimmed through to find his name. A student needed 95%—whatever that meant—to go to university. Richard had already filled in the paperwork and filed it, but without the result, he’d get nowhere. He passed over a handful of names—he felt a flash of vindictive glee as he noted Colin had only scored 15%—until he found his own. He could hardly bare to look.
His heart skipped a beat. 94%.
Richard stared, feeling his legs start to sway. He barely caught himself before they buckled and he hit the floor. 94%! He was dead. He was…his head swam. He was going to join the Army and do his national service and…probably get killed, blown away by his squadmates before the infected zombies ever got a shot at him. Colin had made it clear that he’d kill Richard if he ever got a chance…Richard told himself that he must be mistaken, that Colin was merely being an asshole who made normal assholes look bland and boring, but he couldn’t believe it. He was dead. The tiny note ordering him to see the guidance counsellor mocked him. The man was probably going to measure him for his coffin.
He thought briefly about skipping the meeting and going home. Perhaps there were other options. Perhaps…he couldn’t think of any. There were stories about underground organisations that claimed to help draft dodgers, but he didn’t have any contacts. And the rackets wouldn’t help him either. He didn’t know who to ask…
…And he was too much of a coward to try.
Helplessly, tasting bitter defeat, Richard made his way to the guidance counsellor’s office.
* * * * *
Chapter Two
The guidance counsellor’s office was small and strikingly functional, unlike the Beast’s lair. Richard would have liked it—and what it said about the middle-aged man sitting in a comfortable armchair—if he hadn’t known there was no point to the meeting. He’d failed to qualify for university, and that meant he was doomed to the Army, unless…he couldn’t think of any other options. He’d had the chance to apply to the Navy or the Regular Army, but he’d let that go. There was nothing left for him now, nothing he wanted. There was just national service on the front.
He shuddered. It was nice to think that he’d be assigned to guarding a base in Britain itself, but he didn’t believe it. Troops were needed along the Mediterranean Wall, where they battled with infected humans striving to spread the alien virus into Europe; he’d seen both the officially-released pictures on the BBC and the unofficial videos shot by rogue newspapermen and posted on the dark web. He’d be going there, if he survived the hell of training. And he knew, deep down inside, that he wouldn’t. He’d shoot himself in the foot if he wasn’t too much of a coward to do it.
The guidance counsellor gave him a polite smile. There was something oddly reassuring about him, a calm certainty that was a world away from the savage power of the Beast and the worst of his staff. The guidance counsellor had no doubts about himself, Richard realised slowly. He didn’t have to engage in dominance games. He already knew he was in charge. He didn’t have to wave the cane around threateningly to make his point. And…Richard studied him thoughtfully. The man’s lanky form and loose, dark hair suggested he didn’t feel the need to conform to anything.
“Thank you for coming,” the guidance counsellor said. “I’m Sergeant Garry, Royal Naval Reserve.”
Richard looked down. A sergeant. Wonderful. That was all he needed. Someone who made a career of treating new recruits like crap and screaming at them and…and yet, he couldn’t really believe Sergeant Garry was like that. A man who was truly in command of himself didn’t need to shout and scream to get his point across. Richard hesitated, wondering what that said about the Beast. Perhaps he wasn’t anything like as powerful as he claimed.
“I didn’t think I had a choice,” Richard mumbled. It wasn’t fair. He didn’t want to join the Army. And he was pretty sure the Army didn’t want him, either. “I…”
Sergeant Garry nodded. “You didn’t,” he confirmed. “But you may find our talk informative.”
&nbs
p; Richard didn’t believe it. He hadn’t passed the exams…no, he hadn’t passed with a high enough grade. He wasn’t smart enough for university, and he wasn’t strong enough for the Army. And he’d missed the opportunity to join the branches that would actually teach him a trade…he kicked himself mentally for passing up the chance to parlay his father’s death into a prospective career. He could have joined the right branch and learnt something useful while keeping his skin intact. But it was too late.
“Yes, sir,” he said.
The sergeant nodded, as if he understood precisely what was going through Richard’s head. “You don’t believe me,” he said. It wasn’t a question. “Bear with me a little, please.”
He picked up a datapad. “Richard Tobias Gurnard. Born seventeen years ago to Richard and Molly Gurnard. Father died in action five years ago. You entered primary school a year early, at four years of age. Why was that?”
Richard scowled. “Mum needed to go back to work.”
Sergeant Garry nodded. “I see. You entered secondary school six years ago and passed your first set of exams with flying colours. You applied for university two years ago, more or less, and set yourself on a course to enter university later this year. Which isn’t going to happen, because you didn’t get 95%. Am I correct?”
“It isn’t fair,” Richard said. “I worked hard.”
“So did everyone else,” Sergeant Garry told him. “And there are only a limited number of places at university.”
He glanced back at his datapad. “Do you have anything else that should be mentioned?”
Richard shook his head wordlessly.
Sergeant Garry smiled. “Are you sure?”
“Yes.” Richard lifted his head to meet the sergeant’s eyes. “You don’t have to mock me.”
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