Room 13 Read online




  Brought to you by KeVkRaY

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  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

  About the Author

  Also by Robert Swindells

  Inside the Worm

  Copyright

  To:

  Robert Bates

  Edward Benson

  James Bentham

  Andrea Boyes

  Simon Carney

  Clair Feltwell

  Mark Hall

  Craig Hobson

  Elizabeth Holland

  Louise Horsley

  Andrew Howard

  David Jenkinson

  Samantha Lee

  Gavin Ridealgh

  John Robinson

  Rachael Rowley

  Amanda Whiteley

  Victoria Winterburn

  Who were there too.

  Room 13 was inspired by a real school trip to Whitby by Year Two, from Mandale Middle School in Bradford, 1987.

  THIS IS WHAT Fliss dreamed the night before the second year went to Whitby.

  She was walking on a road high above the sea. It was dark. She was alone. Waves were breaking at the foot of cliffs to her left, and further out, the moonlight made a silver path on the water.

  In front of her was a house. It was a tall house, looming blackly against the sky. There were many windows, all of them dark.

  Fliss was afraid. She didn’t want to go inside the house. She didn’t even want to walk past but she had no control over her feet. They seemed to go by themselves, forcing her on.

  She came to a gate. It was made of iron, worked into curly patterns. Near the top was a bit that was supposed to be a bird in flight – a seagull perhaps – but the gate had been painted black, and the paint had run and hardened into little stalactites along the bird’s wings, making it look like a bat.

  The gate opened by itself, and as she went through Fliss heard a voice that whispered, ‘The Gate of Fate.’ She was drawn along a short pathway and up some stone steps to the front door, which also opened by itself. ‘The Keep of Sleep,’ whispered the voice.

  The door closed silently behind her. Moonlight shone coldly through a stained-glass panel into a gloomy hallway. At the far end were stairs that went up into blackness. She didn’t want to climb that stairway but her feet drew her along the hallway and up.

  She came to a landing with doors. The stairs took a turn and went on up. As Fliss climbed, it grew colder. There was another landing, more doors and another turn in the stair. Upward to a third landing, then a fourth, and then there were no more stairs. She was at the top of the house. There were four doors, each with a number. 10. 11. 12. 13. As she read the numbers, door thirteen swung inward with a squeal. ‘No!’ she whispered, but it was no use. Her feet carried her over the threshold and the voice hissed, ‘The Room of Doom.’

  In the room was a table. On the table stood a long, pale box. Fliss thought she knew what it was. It filled her with horror, and she whimpered helplessly as her feet drew her towards it. When she was close she saw a shape in the box and there was a smell like damp earth. When she was very close the voice whispered, ‘The Bed of Dread,’ and then the shape sat up and reached out for her and she screamed. Her screams woke her and she lay damp and trembling in her bed.

  Her mother came and switched on the light and looked down at her. ‘What is it, Felicity? I thought I heard you scream.’

  Fliss nodded. ‘I had a dream, Mum. A nightmare.’

  ‘Poor Fliss.’ Her mother sat down on the bed and stroked her hair. ‘It’s all the excitement, I expect – thinking about going away tomorrow.’ She smiled. ‘Try to go back to sleep, dear. You’ve a long day ahead of you.’

  Fliss clutched her mother’s arm. ‘I don’t want to go, Mum.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘I don’t want to go. I want to drop out of the trip.’

  ‘But why – not just because of a silly dream, surely?’

  ‘Well, yes, I suppose so, Mum. It was about Whitby, I think. A house by the sea.’

  ‘A house?’

  ‘Yes.’ She shivered, remembering. ‘I was in this house and something horrible was after me. Can I drop out, Mum?’

  Her mother sighed. ‘I suppose you could, Felicity, if you’re as upset as all that. I could ring Mrs Evans first thing, tell her not to expect you, but you might feel differently in the morning.’ She smiled. ‘Daylight makes us forget our dreams, or else they seem funny – even the scary ones. Let’s decide in the morning, eh?’

  Fliss smiled wanly. ‘OK.’ She knew she wouldn’t forget her dream, and that it would never seem funny. But it was all right. She was in control of her feet (she wiggled them under the covers to make sure), and they weren’t going to take her anywhere she didn’t want to go.

  IF YOU WERE a second year there was a different feel about arriving at school that morning. Your friends were standing around in groups by the gate with bags and cases and no uniform, watching the other kids trail down the drive to begin another week of lessons.

  You’d be going into school yourself, of course, but only for a few minutes. Only long enough to answer your name and listen to some final instructions from Mr Joyce. There was a coach at the bottom of the drive – a gleaming blue-and-white coach with tinted windows and brilliant chrome, waiting to whisk you beyond the reach of chairs and tables and bells and blackboards and all the sights and sounds and smells of school, to freedom, adventure and the sea. A week. A whole week, tingling with possibilities and bright with promise.

  Fliss had changed her mind. Waking to the sun in her window and birds in the garden, she had thought about her friends, and the sea, and the things which were waiting there, and her dream of the night before had seemed misty and unreal, which of course it was. Her mother had been pleased, and had resisted the temptation to say ‘I told you so.’

  She’d managed to persuade her parents not to come and see her off. Some parents always did, even when their kids were just off on a day trip. Fliss thought it was daft. Talking in loud voices so everyone could hear, saying stuff like ‘Wrap up warm and stay away from the water and don’t forget to phone so we’ll know you arrived in one piece.’ Plonkers.

  Lisa Watmough was among the crowd by the gate. She was wearing jeans and talking to a girl called Ellie-May Sunderland. Fliss didn’t like Ellie-May much. Nobody did. She was sulky, spoilt and selfish. But never mind. They were off to the seaside, weren’t they? Fliss joined them, putting her suitcase on the ground next to Lisa’s. ‘Hi, you two. Nice morning.’

  ‘Yeah.’ They smiled at the sky. ‘I can’t wait to get on that beach,’ said Fliss.

  ‘I can’t wait to see the hotel,’ said Lisa. ‘Mr Hepworth says it’s called The Crow’s Nest. I hope we’re in the same room, Fliss.’

  ‘You won’t be,’ said Ellie-May. ‘Our Shelley went last year and she says Mrs Evans splits you up from your friends so you don’t play about at night.’

  ‘She might not this year. It’s a different hotel. And anyway, me and Fliss wouldn’t play
about, would we, Fliss?’

  Fliss shook her head and Ellie-May sniggered. ‘Try telling Mrs Evans that.’

  Lisa looked at her watch. It was nearly ten to nine. ‘We’d better move,’ she said. ‘The sooner we get the boring bit over, the sooner we’ll be off.’ They picked up their luggage and set off down the drive.

  Mr Hepworth was standing by the coach. As the girls approached he called out, ‘Come on you three – hurry up. Leave your cases by the back of the bus and go into the hall.’ The driver was stowing luggage in the boot, watched by a knot of parents. The three girls deposited their cases and hurried into school.

  All the second-year kids were lined up in the hall, waiting for Mr Joyce. As Fliss got into line she felt somebody’s breath on her cheek and a voice whispered the word ‘Dracula’ in her ear. She turned round to find Gary Bazzard grinning at her. She scowled. ‘What you on about?’

  ‘I said Dracula.’

  ‘I know that, you div – what about him?’

  ‘Lives in Whitby, doesn’t he?’

  ‘Does he naff! He’s dead for a start, and when he was alive he lived in Transylvania.’

  ‘No.’ The boy shook his shaggy head. ‘Whitby. Old Hepworth told us. And he’s not dead neither. He’s undead. He sleeps in a coffin in the daytime and goes out at night.’

  Fliss felt a flicker of unease as the boy’s words recalled her dream, but the headmaster appeared at that moment and began to address the assembly. He spoke of rambles, ruins and rock-pools as the sun streamed in through high windows and anticipation shone in the eyes of his listeners, but Fliss gazed at the floor, her lip caught between her teeth.

  THEY WERE OFF by twenty-five past nine, growling slowly up the drive while Mr Joyce and a handful of parents stood in a haze of exhaust, waving.

  Fliss and Lisa managed to get seats together. Lisa had the one by the window. As the coach turned on to the road she twisted round for a last glimpse of the school. ‘Goodbye, Bottomtop!’ she cried. ‘And good riddance.’

  ‘That’ll do, Lisa Watmough.’

  Startled, she turned. Mrs Evans was sitting two rows behind, glaring at her through the space between headrests.

  ‘Yes, Miss.’ She faced the front, dug Fliss in the ribs and giggled. ‘I didn’t know she was sitting so close. Where’s Mrs Marriott?’

  ‘Back seat, so she can keep an eye on us all. And Mr Hepworth’s up there with the driver.’

  ‘Huh! Trust teachers to grab all the best seats. Who’s this in front of us?’ The tops of two heads showed above the headrests.

  ‘Gary Bazzard and David Trotter. I hope we’re nowhere near them in the hotel.’

  ‘You won’t be,’ said Ellie-May, who was sitting across the aisle from Fliss. ‘Our Shelley says they put girls on one floor and boys on another so you don’t see each other with nothing on.’

  ‘Our Shelley,’ sneered Fliss. ‘Our Shelley says this, our Shelley says that. I hope we’re not going to have a week of what our Shelley says, Ellie-May.’

  ‘Huh!’ Ellie-May tossed her head. ‘I was telling you how it’ll be, that’s all, misery-guts. Anyway, you can naff off if you want to know owt else – you won’t get it from me.’

  ‘Good!’ Fliss shuffled in her seat, turning as far from Ellie-May as she could, and sat scowling across Lisa at the passing scene.

  Lisa looked at her. ‘What’s up with you?’ she hissed. ‘We’re supposed to be enjoying ourselves and you look like somebody with toothache going into double maths.’

  ‘It’s her.’ Fliss jerked her head in Ellie-May’s direction. ‘She gets on my nerves.’

  ‘She was only telling you. You wanted to know if we’d be anywhere near Baz and Trot and she said we won’t. What’s wrong with that?’

  Fliss shrugged. ‘Nothing.’

  ‘Well then.’

  ‘I don’t feel too good, right? I had this dream last night – a nightmare, and I couldn’t sleep after it. And then this morning in the hall, Bazzard starts going on about Dracula. Saying he lives in Whitby, stuff like that, and I wasn’t in the mood.’

  Lisa pulled a face. ‘No need to take it out on other people though, is there? You could go to sleep here, on the coach. Look – the seat tips back. Lie back and shut your eyes. There’s nothing to look at anyway, unless you like the middle of Leeds.’

  So Fliss pressed the button on the armrest and tipped her seat back, but then the boy in the seat behind yelled out that she was crushing his knees and demanded that she return it to its upright position. When she refused, settling back and closing her eyes, the boy, Grant Cooper, began rhythmically kicking the back of the seat, like somebody beating on a drum. Fliss sighed but kept her eyes closed, saying nothing. As she had anticipated, Mrs Evans soon noticed what the boy was up to. A hand came snaking through the gap between the headrests and grabbed a fistful of his hair. ‘Ow!’ he yelped. Mrs Evans rose, so that the top part of her face appeared over the seat. She began speaking very quietly to Grant Cooper, punctuating her words by alternately tightening and relaxing her grip on his hair.

  ‘Grant Cooper.’ (Squeeze) ‘The upholstery on that seat cost a lot of money.’ (Squeeze) ‘It was fitted to make this coach both smart and comfortable.’ (Squeeze) ‘It was not provided so that horrible little so-and-sos like you could use it for football practice.’ (Squeeze) ‘How d’you think your mother would like it if somebody came into your house and started kicking the back of her three-piece suite, eh?’ (Squeeze) ‘Eh?’ (Squeeze) ‘Like it, would she?’ (Squeeze)

  ‘Please, Miss, no, Miss.’ Grant’s eyes were watering copiously and his mouth was twisted into a grimace which would not have been out of place in a medieval torture-chamber.

  ‘Well, then,’ (Squeeze) ‘kindly show the same respect for other people’s property that your mother would expect to be shown to hers. All right, Grant Cooper?’ (Squeeze)

  ‘Yes, Miss.’ The grip loosened. The hand withdrew. Grant slumped, like a man cut down from the whipping-post, and wiped his eyes with the back of his hand. Mrs Evans’ face sank from view. Fliss smiled faintly to herself, and drifted off to sleep.

  FLISS OPENED HER eyes as the coach swung into a tight turn which nearly catapulted her into the aisle. ‘What’s happening – where are we?’

  ‘Pickering,’ said Lisa. ‘We’re stopping. You’ve been asleep ages.’

  Fliss looked out. They were rolling on to a big car-park with a wall round it. As the coach stopped, Mr Hepworth stood up at the front. ‘This is Pickering,’ he said. ‘And we are making a toilet stop.’ His eyes swept along the coach and locked on to those of a boy near the back. ‘A toilet stop, Keith Halliday. Not a shopping stop. Not a sightseeing stop. Not a “let’s buy packets of greasy fish and chips, scoff the lot before Sir sees us and then throw up all over the coach” stop. Have I made myself quite clear?’

  ‘Sir.’

  ‘Right. The toilets,’ he pointed, ‘are down there at the bottom of this car-park. To get into them, you have to go out on to the pavement. It’s a very busy road, and I don’t want to see anyone trying to cross it. Neither do I want to see boys going into the ladies’ toilet, or girls into the gents’. Have I said something funny, Andrew Roberts?’

  ‘No, Sir.’

  ‘Right.’ He looked at his watch. ‘It’s ten past eleven. The coach will leave here at twenty-five past on the dot. Make sure you’re on it, because it’s a long walk back to Bradford.’

  ‘When we get back on,’ whispered Fliss to Lisa, ‘it’s my turn for the window seat, right?’

  Lisa nodded. ‘You feeling better, then?’

  ‘Yes, thanks. I had a lovely sleep.’

  ‘I know. You missed a lot, though. There was this field – a sloping field with millions of poppies in it. The whole field was red. It was ace.’

  When Fliss got back on the coach there was no sign of Lisa. She sat down and watched the kids straggling across the tarmac in the warm sunshine. Soon, everybody was back on board except her friend. The driver had s
tarted the engine and Mrs Marriott was counting heads when Lisa appeared from behind the toilet block and came hurrying to the coach. As she clambered aboard, Mr Hepworth looked at his watch. ‘What time did I say we’d be leaving, Lisa Watmough?’

  Some of the children were sniggering and Lisa blushed. ‘Twenty-five past, Sir. I forgot the time, Sir.’

  ‘You forgot the time. Well, for your information it is now twenty-six minutes to twelve, and we’ll be lucky if we arrive at the hotel by midday, which is when we are expected. The meal which is being prepared for us might well be ruined, and it will be all your fault, Lisa Watmough.’ He bent forward suddenly, peering at her jeans. ‘What have you got there?’ Something was making a bulge in the pocket of Lisa’s jeans and she was trying to conceal it with her hand.

  ‘Nothing, Sir.’

  ‘Take it out and give it to me.’

  ‘It’s just this, Sir.’ She pulled out an object wrapped in tissue paper and handed it over. The teacher stripped away the wrapping to reveal a green plastic torch in the shape of a dragon. The bulb and its protective glass were in the dragon’s gaping mouth. Mr Hepworth held up the torch, using only his thumb and forefinger, and looked at it with an expression of extreme distaste.

  ‘Did you bring this – this thing with you from home, Lisa Watmough?’

  ‘No, Sir.’

  ‘Oh. Then I suppose there’s a little kiosk inside the ladies’ toilet where patrons can do a bit of shopping. Am I right?’

  ‘No, Sir.’

  The teacher frowned. ‘Then I’m afraid I don’t understand. You didn’t bring it from home, and you didn’t get it in the ladies’. You haven’t been anywhere else, yet here it is. Perhaps you laid it, like a hen lays an egg. Did you?’

  ‘No, Sir.’

  ‘Then what did you do?’

  ‘I went in a shop, Sir.’

  ‘You did what?’

  ‘Went in a shop, Sir.’

  ‘And what had I said about shopping, Lisa Watmough, just before you got off the coach?’

  ‘We weren’t to do any, Sir.’

  ‘Right. Then why did you go into that shop?’