WE CLOSED THE door behind us and scanned the room for Petts. The few captives who were not asleep sat up to take a look at us. I put my finger to my lips and they nodded, becoming alert as they realised what was going on. I recognised most of them from the market at Hildenborough.
“Very quietly, wake the person next to you,” I whispered, and the room gradually came to life in a frenzy of shushing. I tiptoed through the half-asleep bodies to the far door and put my ear to it, but could hear no sound outside. I checked my watch. 6:20. Loads of time.
The chapel was on the north side of the house and one floor up, so there was little chance of us being heard, but there was no point taking risks. All three of us moved through the mass of captives whispering for quiet until everyone was awake. We found Petts, alive and well, huddled up with a young girl in the corner. Held prisoner by a blood cult, with nothing to look forward to but a gruesome death, and he had managed to pull. I was impressed. I don’t think anyone has ever been so glad to see me in my life. He hugged me, which made me wince as he pressed on my tender stab wound.
“Williams is here, too,” he told me.
Shit. I turned to try and find him but I was too late. Mac had him up against the far wall with a knife to his throat. I tried to push my way through the tightly packed crowd to intervene. Williams’ eyes were popping out in terror; he must have thought we’d come all this way for revenge.
“You sold us out,” Mac hissed.
Williams couldn’t say a thing, he just shook with fear.
“Mac, leave him,” I said urgently, fighting my way forward. “We don’t have time for this.”
“You’re right,” he said. “We don’t.”
Before I could reach them he drew his knife across Williams’ throat. As the boy slid down the wall with a wet, gargled scream, his hands grasping at the gaping wound, trying to push the raw red gash together, trying to push his blood back in, Mac hissed into his face: “That’s what we do to traitors.”
Before I could react a woman behind me, half awake, unsure what was going on, saw the blood and began to scream.
“They’ve come for us, they’ve come for us! Oh God, oh God, I don’t want to die.”
The man next to her slapped her hard across the face.
“Shut up you stupid cow, we’re being rescued.” It was the guard from Hildenborough, Mr Cheshire Cheese. He looked up at me, desperate. “We are being rescued, right?”
“Yeah,” said Mac. “Just taking care of a little unfinished business. Nothing for you to worry about.”
There was a sad, feeble gasp from Mac’s feet as Williams breathed his last.
Norton found my gaze and held it. I saw his jaw clench and his eyes widen. His knuckles went white on the grip of his knife.
Now?
Oh, how I wanted to shoot Mac there and then. But there were too many people around; the plan was going too well. It could derail everything and get us killed if I took him out now.
I gave a single, almost imperceptible shake of the head.
Not yet.
Cheshire Cheese stood up, electing himself spokesman for the prisoners.
“You’re from the school right?” he said to me. “I remember you.”
“I should hope so,” I replied. “My execution was the big draw, after all.”
“I suppose I should be grateful you survived, then, huh.”
“I suppose you should.”
“So what’s the plan?”
Mac took his small waterproof backpack off, opened it up and started handing out the guns.
While the ten most capable prisoners were selected and armed, Norton got to work on the locked door. That’s when things started to go wrong.
“ONCE WE’VE ARMED the prisoners, we get through the locked door, go through one more room, and all we’ve got to do then is walk out across the east bridge. Then, once we’re clear, we blow the bridges, trap the fuckers in their little moated manor house, and burn the place to the ground. Take care of these blood suckers once and for all. Piece of cake.”
PLAN A — FORCING the lock — didn’t work.
“I can’t pick it. This lock is ancient.”
Plan B — shoulder charging it — didn’t work.
“It’s no use, it’s too solid, even three of us charging at once can’t budge it.”
Plan C — shooting out the lock — didn’t work.
“Fuck it, they might have heard that. Time to move.”
Plan D — blowing the thing open with a grenade and running like hell before the Blood Hunters had time to mobilise — was abandoned when it was pointed out that the crypt was tiny and the explosion would deafen those it didn’t kill.
We’d lost five minutes by now, and time was running out.
“Okay, fuck! We’ll have to go out across the west bridge,” said Mac. “The east bridge is inaccessible. That means we go back the way we came, through the pantry and across the courtyard. We’ll be exposed to the chapel, and the top of the tower, so wherever they are by now they’ll see us or hear us, but if everyone runs like fuck then we should make it across the courtyard before they can open fire. Once you’re across the bridge just run for the tree-line. We’ve got boys there and you’ll get covering fire. Everyone clear?”
People nodded and mumbled nervously.
“Okay, Petts you take point,” said Mac, and he opened the door we’d entered through.
Petts went first with Norton, Mac and I ushered the prisoners out after him as swiftly as we could. Not all the prisoners were out of the crypt before we heard gunfire from the courtyard.
Fuck, they weren’t wasting any time.
We didn’t let the remaining prisoners hesitate, though, we kept pushing them out until the crypt was empty, and then we followed.
About half the prisoners had made it across the courtyard, under the tower and across the bridge. We could see them through the gate, hurrying into the trees. Patel and Speight were stood underneath the tower, at the entrance to the bridge, firing up at the chapel windows directly above us. The Blood Hunters were returning fire.
We stood in the pantry with about twenty terrified people and looked out across the twenty-metre space. There were two people lying dead on the cobbles.
One of them was Petts.
“They’ll be fanning out across the building,” I shouted. “If we don’t move now we’ll be caught in a crossfire. So run!” I shoved the prisoners as hard as I could and they stumbled out into the courtyard and ran, heads down, for safety. Mac and Norton helped me shove, as did Cheshire Cheese, and eventually they all made the dash across the exposed space. Two more were shot, the rest made it out.
We four followed hard on the heels of the last man out, but the second we set foot outside, the man in front of us shook and jerked under the impact of a stream of bullets from the billiard room door in the corner on the ground floor. The Blood Hunters had cut us off. We’d never make it to the bridge alive.
We were trapped.
“NOW IF THINGS go tits up and we get stuck in there I want the fucking ninth cavalry to come storming in and sort it out. You’ll be split into two teams and you’ll wait under cover by the bridges. If we yell for help you are to come pelting across those bridges and shoot anything that moves. Got it?”