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Dark Wind Blowing

Page 9

by Jackie French


  Perhaps he wasn’t seeing them, thought Mike. Who knows what Lance saw.

  The siren screamed, the police officers kept glancing round, as though they expected Lance to try to murder them or Mike, the police wheels pounded on the broken bitumen as though they were chanting deep into Mike’s brain:

  Which one is guilty,

  Which of us three,

  Mr Loosley or Loser or me …

  At Gunyabah police station they’d taken Lance away. Mike had caught a glimpse of Mrs Loosley, her face carved with desperation, frantically running up from the car park, before the police took him to an interview room.

  Mr Loosley had still been out searching for Lance with Constable Svenic. With the small part of his mind that could still think at all, Mike was glad that Mr Loosley hadn’t arrived at Gunyabah police station yet. He couldn’t have faced Mr Loosley.

  We are all guilty,

  Each of us three,

  Mr Loosley and Loser and me …

  They’d given Mike a cup of tea in the interview room, and one of the constables had gone out and bought him a hamburger, but he couldn’t eat it. Mum had arrived, all shaking and with her hair in a mess, and he’d told his story into a tape recorder, and then read it and signed it when the police sergeant typed it out. He’d tried to tell them it wasn’t just Lance’s fault. It was everyone’s fault, but the words wouldn’t come.

  ‘You’re quite a hero, son,’ said the police sergeant, as he finally escorted them out the door.

  Mike shook his head. He was no hero. Lance was no villain. Jazz could explain it all to them, he thought vaguely. Jazz would know the words.

  ‘What’s going to happen to him?’ whispered Jazz from her pillow.

  ‘Lance? I don’t know. They say he’s sick, mentally sick — that’s what the counsellor told us. I don’t know if he’ll go to prison, or a sort of prison hospital. But I don’t think they’ll let him go home.’ Mike hesitated. ‘I don’t think he’ll want to go home.’

  Outside the police station Mum had hugged him for a long time before she’d been able to drive. Dad had been waiting at the house, a look on his face that Mike had never seen before. Things had been … different … with Dad since then.

  ‘The people from the Department of Health finally turned up,’ said Mike. ‘Just as it was all over. They wore these respirators and everything Budgie said, but I missed it all.’

  Jazz didn’t answer. Her eyes were closed, the lashes very black against the milky brown of her face, the pillow a hard white against her hair. She must be asleep again, thought Mike. It was time to go.

  He stood up, hesitated, then pressed her hand — the one without the needle. Her fingers closed round his, slowly but firmly. Mike sat down again, his hand still in hers. The sounds of the hospital washed over him: the clink of a trolley in the corridor, a far off beeping, the magpies gurgling outside.

  ‘Mum can’t get over how kind everyone’s been,’ whispered Jazz finally. ‘How everyone helped in the emergency. She said she’s never seen anything like it. She’s talking about staying here. Dad wants to stay too.’

  Happiness began to soak through Mike, warm as the sunlight. But he just said, ‘That’s good.’

  ‘Shouldn’t be too hard,’ said Jazz sleepily. ‘Not with the shortage of doctors out here. Mike?’

  ‘Mmmm?’

  ‘Will you take me fishing when I get out of here? To that place on the farm you told me about? Mum says I’ll be out in a few days.’

  ‘Sure,’ said Mike. He supposed he’d be spending lots more time out at the farm with Dad now, anyway.

  Suddenly it was extraordinarily good to be alive. Everything looked clearer, brighter, than he had ever seen it. Even the old pepper tree through the crack in the curtains seemed dipped in gold. Was that what happened when you faced death, Mike wondered. Suddenly you saw life as well?

  He smiled, and let the sunlight seep through him as he sat there, holding Jazz’s hand.

  In the Blood

  The body was lying by my gate, half curled around the post as thought for comfort.

  I tried to find a pulse. The blood smeared on my fingers. ‘He sucked at my neck,’ she whispered. ‘He said he’d drain me dry.’

  Exiled from the City, virtual engineer Danielle Forest hunts a killer in a world of scattered utopias and genetically engineered human-animal crosses. Danielle needs help and finds it in the most unlikely shape of Neil, a member of the local farming community.

  Who — or what — committed murder? Was it a psychotic? A genetic modification gone wrong? Or are the ancient vampire legends based on fact?

  In the Blood is an enthralling thriller and love story. It is also a vampire story with a difference!

  ISBN: 0 207 19779 2

  Hitler’s Daughter

  The bombs were falling, the smoke was rising from the concentration camps, but all Hitler’s daughter knew was the world of lessons with Fraulein Gelber, and the hedgehogs she rescued from the cold.

  Was it just a story? Did Hitler’s daughter really exist? If you were Hitler’s daughter, would it all be your fault too? Was it all so long ago it didn’t matter … or did Mark have to face the same questions …?

  Another enthralling historical novel from the author of Daughter of the Regiment, Soldier on the Hill and Somewhere Around the Corner.

  “… a tribute to the power of the storyteller …”

  The Age

  “… beautifully simple to read … a believable and compelling story.”

  Sydney Morning Herald

  ISBN: 0 207 19801 2

  About the Author

  Jackie French’s writing career spans ten years, 32 wombats, 80 books for kids and adults, seven languages, various awards, assorted ‘Burke’s Backyard’ segments in a variety of disguises, radio shows, newspaper and magazine columns, theories of pest and weed ecology and 27 shredded back doormats. The doormats are the victims of the wombats who require constant appeasement in the form of carrots, rolled oats and wombat nuts, which is one of the reasons for her prolific output: it pays the carrot bills.

  Her critically acclaimed book, Hitler’s Daughter, won the Children’s Book Council Book of the Year Award for Younger Readers in 2000.

  For more information on Jackie French, her

  wombats and her books, zap onto her website:

  www.jackiefrench.com

  Other books by Jackie French

  Fiction

  The Roo that Won the Melbourne Cup • Rain Stones

  Walking the Boundaries • The Boy Who Had Wings

  Somewhere Around the Corner

  Annie’s Pouch • Alien Games • The Secret Beach

  Mermaids • Mind’s Eye • A Wombat Named Bosco

  Summerland • Beyond the Boundaries

  The Warrior — the Story of a Wombat

  The Book of Unicorns • Dancing with Ben Hall

  Soldier on the Hill • Daughter of the Regiment

  Stories to Eat with a Banana • Tajore Arkle

  Hitler’s Daughter • In the Blood

  Missing You, Love Sara

  Stories to Eat with a Watermelon • Lady Dance

  Stories to Eat with a Blood Plum

  How the Finnegans Saved the Ship

  Non-fictcion

  How the Aliens from Alpha Centauri Invaded My

  Maths Class and Turned Me Into a Writer …

  How to Guzzle Your Garden • Book of Challenges

  Stamp Stomp Whomp & Other Interesting Ways to

  Get Rid of Pests

  Seasons of Content • The Best of Jackie French

  Earthly Delights • The Fascinating History of your Lunch

  Visit Jackie’s website

  www.jackiefrench.com

  Copyright

  Angus&Robertson

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, Australia

  First published in Australia in 2001

  This edition published in 2013

  by HarperCollinsPublisher
s Pty Limited

  ABN 36 009 913 517

  A member of the HarperCollinsPublishers (Australia) Pty Limited Group

  www.harpercollins.com.au

  Copyright © Jackie French 2001

  The right of Jackie French to be identified as the moral rights author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright Amendment (Moral Rights) Act 2000 (Cth).

  This book is copyright.

  Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission.

  Inquiries should be addressed to the publishers.

  HarperCollinsPublishers

  HarperCollinsPublishers

  Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street, Sydney NSW 2000, Australia

  31 View Road, Glenfield, Auckland 0627, New Zealand

  A 53, Sector 57, Noida, UP, India

  77–85 Fulham Palace Road, London W6 8JB, United Kingdom

  2 Bloor Street East, 20th floor, Toronto, Ontario M4W 1A8, Canada

  10 East 53rd Street, New York NY 10022, USA

  National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-publication data:

  French, Jackie.

  Dark wind blowing.

  ISBN 978 0 2071 9796 3(pbk).

  ISBN 978 1 4607 0168 3(epub)

  1. Bullying – Juvenile fiction. I. Title.

  A823.3

 

 

 


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