Authors: Maxine Barry
It struck the seat of the chair with a sharp âtwang' of sound. It seemed to free her from her state of denial, and at last Alicia opened her mouth and screamed.
She
screamed loudly, desperately, and with everything in her.
In the room next door Emily fell off her bed. She scrambled to her feet, her heart racing, and yanked open her door. âAlicia!' she yelled desperately.
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Jared had been halfway down the corridor when he heard Alicia scream and burst into a frantic run. His heart in his throat, a prayer in his heart, and his body bathed in animal fear, he got to Alicia's door and thrust it open.
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Rupert had retracted the knife from the wood by this time, and grabbed the leg of the chair being brandished in his face.
âAlicia stop it!' he admonished, and at that moment, the door behind them burst open. Jared and Emily both tumbled in, then stopped dead in the centre of the room. Emily took in the situation with a horrified glance, her freckles standing out starkly in her ash-pale face.
Jared was much more aware of Alicia firstâshe was alive! Then he took in the chair she was holding up in front of her, the way she was shaking, the look of terror in her eyes. When Rupert turned, utterly surprised at the
intrusion,
Jared saw the knife. And he became strangely calm. He realised there were far too many people in the room, and he reached behind him and gestured Emily to leave.
She backed out, then raced down the corridor. She was running before she even knew where she was going, but when she flew down the stairs and into the hall, she turned automatically towards the admin offices, which were, luckily for them all, situated in Webster. In cases of extremis, all St Bede's students turned inevitably to one person: Sin-Jun.
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âWhat are you doing here?' Rupert asked Jared, his voice curiously pettish. âYou're not supposed to be here.'
Jared glanced questioningly at Alicia, who looked blankly back at him. Jared saw her begin to sway.
âUnless,' Rupert said, suddenly seeing the light, âI'm supposed to kill you too. Is that right, Alicia?' he began to turn back towards her.
Jared, desperate to keep him away from Alicia, to keep him from even thinking about her, said quickly, loudly, âYes, that's right. You have to kill me first.'
âJared no!' Alicia gasped. But it was too late. With a snarl, Rupert launched himself on Jared. He didn't have to make it beautiful for
him!
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Sin-Jun looked up, astonished, as a ginger-haired virago erupted into his office, his secretary ineffectively trotting in behind her, an outraged look on her face. âYou've got to come . . .' Emily panted. âTo . . . to Alicia's room. Rupert's got a knife!'
He surged to his feet. âWhere are they?' he barked.
Emily gulped. âWebster. Room twenty-eight.' Before she'd even finished speaking, Sin-Jun was out of the room. For an old man, he moved very, very fast.
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Jared grunted as he felt himself being slammed back against the wall. His hand came out instinctively to grip Rupert's wrist and the knife missed his face by inches. Rupert was incredibly, ferociously strong. In fact, he had a madman's strength. Jared knew, in that instant, that he was never going to be able to fight him off. He knew a single second of stark fear, then a certain, calming acceptance. All right. He was going to die. If only he could do enough damage first to stop the madman from killing Alicia too.
Emily must have gone for help . . . If he
could
just keep Rupert distracted for a few more minutes . . . With a snarl Rupert drew his hand free and got ready for another lunge.
Desperately, Jared reached again for his arm. Too late.
Alicia gave another scream, this time carrying clearly to the Principal, who was already on the stairs.
Alicia, knowing that Jared was only moments away from being stabbed to death, tossed the chair aside, and, without a single second's hesitation, launched herself at Rupert. She leapt on to his back like a wildcat, clawing his face, screaming somethingâshe didn't know whatâover and over again. Rupert gave a shout of surprise and Jared shuddered as the knife scraped by the wall just an inch from his cheek.
Sin-Jun erupted into the room and took in the scene in one glance. The girl on Lord Rupert's back, the boy, Jared Cowan, pinned to the wall, desperately holding on to Rupert's wrist, the glint of the knife. Sin-Jun strode across the room, peeled Alicia off as if she was a piece of rice paper, and aimed a single, clever blow to the back of Rupert's neck. Sin-Jun hadn't been in the army for over twenty years without learning a trick or too.
Without a sound, the Lord of the Realm crumpled to the floor with barely a sigh, utterly unconscious.
Jared staggered from the wall and towards
Alicia,
who was still lying on the bed where the Principal had tossed her. She lifted up her arms mutely and he held her close.
After that there was an ambulance to call, the Earl of Warrington to inform, and any other number of unpleasant but necessary duties. Alicia and Jared simply sat on the bed together, Jared holding her so tightly she could hardly breathe, rocking her to and fro, stroking her hair, and thanking God he hadn't lost her.
Finally, Alicia slowly looked up at him, and managed a small, tremulous, brave smile. âI was so happy to see you come in that door,' she said, which had to be the understatement of her life. âBut why did you come? I thought, when I left, we'd agreed to meet up in Hall.'
Jared smiled. âOh. That. I wanted to ask you what stone you wanted for your engagement ring.'
Alicia laughed. âAn emerald of course. What else?'
Jared began to laugh. âWhat else?'
He kissed her, oblivious to Emily, oblivious to the Principal, oblivious even, to the unconscious man on the floor. He had his Alicia. And would have her for the rest of his life. That was all that mattered in the world . . .
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
âSo, what do you think?' Gareth Lacey said, standing outside the Cottage in Dun's Tew. It
bore
a freshly carved, wooden nameplate, âSpindlewood Cottage', which swung in the April wind.
âIt's home,' Davina said simply. She tucked her arm inside his, looking at the thatched cottage with a sense of ownership and pride she'd never felt for any other building in her life.
Gareth knew how much that simple statement meant. He looked down at her spiky blonde head and, with a gentle finger under her chin, tipped her face up to his. âBut it's not a prison,' he said, his ocean-grey eyes looking deeply into hers. âWhenever you want to go off to Bora-Bora, or gold mining in Alaska, or whatever, just go. We'll be here waiting for you when you get back.'
âI know,' Davina said, her eyes glowing. âI know you will.' Never had a man understood her so thoroughly.
âWell, shall I carry you over the threshold?' Gareth asked, turning to her, reaching down to cup his arms under her legs. âSince it's probably the only chance I'll get . . . ?' he looked up at her questioningly.
Davina laughed. It was the most roundabout way of proposing she'd ever heard. But she didn't take him up on it. Marriage was something that had always frightened her.
Perhaps in ten years' time . . . ?
She raised one eyebrow. âWhy does it always have to be the man to carry the woman across
the
threshold?' she asked. âI could carry you across instead.' She suddenly ducked, reaching for his own legs.
âHey! Not fair!' he yelped, ducking again, grabbing her legs and hoisting her over his shoulder in a fireman's lift.
âThis is not carrying me over the threshold!' Davina yelped indignantly as he walked up the garden path and opened the door. But it would do.
Oh yes, Davina thought, her heart racing.
It would most definitely do.