“David will come for me and when he does you’ll pay. You’ll all pay.” This last directed at me and Speight.
“Let me guess,” said Mac, impersonating The Count from Sesame Street. “We’ll pay… in blood! Mwahahaha!”
Speight chuckled. I rolled my eyes.
“You’ll help make us safe. We’re chosen. You’re nothing.”
“This whole ‘safe’ thing, let me see if I’ve got this straight,” said Mac. “You smear yourself in human blood to protect you against what exactly… the plague?”
“The chosen shall bathe in the blood of the cattle, and they shall eat of their flesh, and they shall be spared the pestilence.”
“But you’ve already survived the pestilence, yeah? I mean, you’re O-neg, right? David’s O-neg, your blood brothers are all O-neg, your victims are O-neg. You’re all immune anyway otherwise you’d be dead, wouldn’t you? So what’s the fucking point?”
“The pestilence was sent by God to cleanse the Earth. It was The Rapture, don’t you see? The worthy were taken up to The Lord and we have been left behind. We are the cursed ones and we must prove ourselves worthy in his sight before the Second Coming. We are living through the seven years of The Tribulation. We must not fail the trials before us or we shall burn in hell forever. David is the prophet of the Second Coming and he shall lead the chosen into Heaven. He anoints us with the blood of the unworthy so that when the pestilence returns to carry off those who have failed in the sight of The Lord we shall be protected from the mutation. We shall live forever, don’t you see? When David takes the blood of the cattle and blesses it then it becomes the blood of The Christ and we are cleansed. Hallelujah!”
We just stared. None of us really had an answer for that.
“Um, right,” said Mac, for once rendered almost speechless. “Okay. Look, mate, I don’t want to get into a philosophical discussion with you and stuff. I just want to know the routine in your little manor house, yeah? What times you eat, what time you put the lights out, guard changes, that sort of stuff. Oh yeah, and where you keep the cattle from Hildenborough locked up. You know, just the basics. Think you can help me out?”
The prisoner appeared to think about this for a moment and then replied: “Piss off.”
Mac turned to me and Speight, and beamed. “Finally, fucking finally, I get to torture somebody!”
He turned back and brandished the knife. “Right, you smelly little toerag, I am going to cut you into tiny chunks and feed you to the pigs!”
“Mac, a word,” I said. I was still in Mac’s bad books but he hadn’t demoted me or anything, so I figured I was still persona grata.
“What is it, Nine Lives? I’m busy.” He advanced towards the captive.
“Mac, a moment please,” I insisted. “Outside.”
He turned to look at me. He did not look happy. “This had better be good.”
In the corridor I explained my idea to Mac, who thought about it for a moment and then nodded. Speight scurried off to get the necessary torture implements.
“Does this mean I don’t get to cut him?” said Mac, disappointed.
“You can, yeah, but not now, eh? Just let me do this, we’ll get the info we need, then you can do what you want with him. Fair?”
“All right. This better work though.”
“Trust me.”
Speight returned and handed the tools over to me. I re-entered the room, with Mac and Speight behind me, and I advanced on the bound prisoner. I placed the torture devices on the bedside cabinet, pulled up a chair, and leaned forward to whisper conspiratorially in the captive’s ear.
I told him what I was going to do.
He begged for mercy, but I refused to relent.
I reached into the bowl, pulled out the wet flannel, wrung it out and began to wash the blood from his face.
He screamed.
Not so safe now.
By the time I reached for the shampoo he was telling us everything we wanted to know.
EVERYONE ASSEMBLED IN the briefing room later that evening, in full combats, camouflage on their faces. Guns had already been issued. The thirty-eight remaining boys, remaining officers, myself and Mac gathered together to plan an attack that I felt sure many of us would not survive.
Mac talked us through his plan and I watched as it dawned on the boys exactly how dangerous this night was going to be for them. Rowles looked terrified, Norton was ashen-faced. Defensive fighting is one thing, but to deliberately pick a fight with a heavily armed force entrenched in a near impregnable fortress is quite another. Mac gave it the hard sell, and nobody refused to participate. And to be fair, the plan could work, with a huge truckload of luck.
As the sun fell we marched out the front door and began the three mile yomp to Ightham Mote, determined to rescue our schoolmate and neutralise a threat that could destroy us.
St Mark’s school for boys was going to war.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE MAIN ASSEMBLY hall in Castle is full of names. On the wall that used to face the massed school each morning are six large black wooden boards, all hand decorated in blue and gold. The first three list, in chronological order, the Head Boys of the school going back 150 years. The next two list those pupils and teachers from St Mark’s who died in The Great War, and the final one lists the Second World War dead.
But these aren’t the only names in the main hall. The wooden panelling which clads the walls, deep polished and ancient, has been carved on by generations of boys. From the modern graffiti, simple scratches with a compass, to the old, ornate graffiti, with serifed fonts and punctuation, which must have taken hours of patient work with a penknife, boys have left their mark on St Mark’s.
These names tell stories, and one name always fascinated me. James B. Grant carved his name into the wood panel beneath the farthest rear window. It’s a beautiful piece of work, one of the most elaborate signatures in the hall. It must have taken him ages. It reads ‘James B. Grant, 1913.’
His name also appears on the middle board of Head Boys, which tells us that he was Head Boy for the school year 1912-13; he must have carved his name on the wall in his final week at school, unafraid of punishment.
Finally, his is the last name on the board listing the dead of The Great War. He died in 1918.
A whole life story in three names.
There are pictures of the boys St Mark’s sent to war, all dressed up in their corps uniforms. The faded, sepia photographs hang in the corridor that leads to the headmaster’s study, each one with a list of names beneath, telling us who these boys were. There is one photograph, of the school corps from 1912, in which every single one of those names is to be found on the list of war dead. Every single one. Even given the slaughter of those years that’s a remarkable and tragic clean sweep.
James B. Grant sits front and centre in that photograph. He’s wearing puttees and a peaked cap, and he’s got a swagger stick lying across his lap. He looks confident but not serious; there’s a twinkle in his eye and a slight hint of amusement about the lips. He looks like a man who doesn’t take himself too seriously, and I like that about him. He was an officer in the school corps and was doubtless an officer at the front.
When I was much younger I told my dad about this boy, whose name recurred through the fabric of my school. I remember asking him if I’d ever have to go to war, and he said no. He promised me there’d never be another war of conscription, not in my lifetime. The only people who’d go soldiering, he said, were those who’d chosen that life for themselves, like him. I was reassured.