‘I mean, they would ring the people who worked at the lab in the middle of the night . . .’
‘That’s not so bad,’ said Max.
‘. . . and threaten to kill their children,’ she finished.
‘Oh. That’s not so good,’ he admitted. ‘Still, they started it, kidnapping cats.’
‘I know, but their kids aren’t to blame, are they?’
‘No. I suppose not.’ Max didn’t look entirely convinced.
‘Maybe we should get in touch with the first lot,’ said Millie.
‘But if we are going to try and rescue the others, that’s direct action, is it not?’ asked Max.
‘Yes. I guess so.’ Millie thought for a moment. ‘There aren’t any phone numbers or other contact details. Let’s mail them both. We’ll see what we can find out.’
‘No, don’t do that.’ Max stood up suddenly. ‘What if they are not real people, writing these things?’
‘You think fictional people are doing it? Can they even type?’
Max gave Millie a long, level stare. ‘Not fictional people, Miss Clever,’ he said, making her smirk. ‘You might wish to remember,’ he added haughtily, ‘that I am speaking in my third language. I mean, what if the people at the laboratory are behind the sites? They are not real protesters, even though they are real people.’
‘Calm down,’ said Millie. ‘I’m on it. I’m going to set up a special account, which is remote from this computer. We’ll mail them from there, and they won’t be able to track it back to us at all. And we’ll only use it for mailing this site, so nobody will be able to put two and two together.’
‘Why would they do that?’
‘It’s just an expression – put two and two together. It means take little bits of evidence and jump to a big conclusion. But they won’t be able to match the person mailing the site with the girl cleaning windows. I promise.’
Max still looked sceptical, but eventually shrugged his consent.
‘Now,’ Millie continued, ‘we need a user name, and a password – something no one else would know.’ She picked up her book, flipped to a random page, and picked the first two nouns – overcoat and collar – that she found on page 35. ‘Right, that’s it. The username is “overcoat1”, and the password is “collar35”. We’ll remember that, but no one would be able to guess it.’
‘That’s pretty clever,’ said Max. ‘Have you done this kind of thing before?’
‘My dad’s really interested in codes and ciphers,’ replied Millie. ‘He wrote computer programs before he lost his job. He’s nuts about stuff like this. He’s always going on about how people use stupid stuff for passwords – their friend’s name, or their pet’s, and their birthday, or someone they know’s birthday, you know, for the number. Makes it easy for someone else to guess. But if you open a book at random, and pick two words, no one is going to guess those. Even if they get the book you were reading, what are the chances they’ll come to the same page that you did, and pick out the same words?’
‘So, how will you remember them?’ asked Max, confused.
Millie shrugged. ‘I just will,’ she replied. ‘How do you remember your way around Ixelles?’
Max nodded slowly.
‘Right, that’s the account set up,’ Mille continued. ‘Now, the message.’
hello – i am mailing to ask you about the haverham lab. i’ve been reading your site, and you seem to think that they only have rodents there. i am sure there are also cats being used for tests in that building. i want to expose the truth. can you help me?
‘That should do, don’t you think?’
‘I suppose so,’ Max agreed. ‘We don’t want to expose the truth straight away, though. We need to get the others out first, especially Celeste and Monty.’
‘I know. But we’ll have to offer them something, or they might not reply.’
‘OK, send it.’ Max was suddenly decisive.
Millie pressed the button. They waited for the ticking arrow to turn. Message sent flashed up on the screen. She did it again, and sent the same message to the second site.
‘Now what?’ asked Max.
‘Now I take this book back to the library and get you some cat food. You go for a wander, if you want to, or stay here, if you don’t. I’ll be back in an hour and we can see if they’ve replied.’
Chapter Nine
Max decided to go and lie in the sunshine in Millie’s back garden. He had been warned by Millie about the nosy neighbour, so he found a tree to hide under and he lay behind it, watching the stupid, stupid birds, and wondering about another meal. There were insects buzzing all around him and he thought about catching one of those, just for the practice. At this point, a butterfly flapped into his ear and he sneezed. Probably there wasn’t much point trying to catch something that would just fly into you anyway. He lounged in the sun and began to snooze.
Millie, meanwhile, waved cheerily at Mrs Ellis as she went out of the front door. She explained that she was just off to the library and showed her a bag full of books. This was such an unquestionably respectable errand that Mrs Ellis waved back and didn’t interfere at all. Millie swapped her books for a new batch with only half her mind on the job. When she got home, she would realise that she had read two of them before. She stopped off at the supermarket and bought dry cat food for Max, because the tins were much too heavy to carry. Then she saw some little pouches of special cat food and bought one as a treat. She chose a cake for herself, so Max wasn’t the only one eating something nice, and hurried home. She unlocked the French windows, but before she had even opened them fully, Max was snaking around her feet.
‘You must have sonar.’ Millie laughed. ‘Did the key make that much noise?’
‘Ah, it’s nothing. Everyone has something they are good at. Not all cats hear well, you know. There’s a cat near my home who is quite deaf. He will get hit by a car some day, and it will be very sad. On the other hand, if your hearing is bad, it’s not so sensible to sit in the middle of the road.’
‘I brought presents. Look.’ Millie showed Max the dry cat food and the special pouch. ‘This was expensive, so I only got you one. But I’ll get you some more if it’s nice. I wasn’t sure if you liked the dry stuff.’
‘You know, you are a very kind girl. And I will enjoy it, I am sure. I might still supplement it with the occasional bird or fish, however.’
‘Max, don’t steal fish from the goldfish pond next door but one. I’ll get in trouble.’
‘Really?’
‘Well, I will if they see you lying next to me in the middle of our garden and realise I’m the one who’s responsible for you.’
‘I am responsible for myself.’
‘Yes, well, you can tell my dad that when they come round demanding to know why we’re looking after a cat who visibly isn’t a stray and letting it eat fish out of their pond. They’re really mean, that family.’
‘Very well. It is OK to eat their canary?’
‘That’s not even a bit funny.’
‘If they had had a canary, it would have been hilarious.’
‘Shush. Now, come on. Let’s go and check if we’ve got any new messages.’
Millie logged onto their new account. ‘Inbox: 2 new messages’, it read. She clicked on the first, which came from the first website.
hi. how do you know what’s going on there? do you work there? we haven’t seen any deliveries of cats in the last six months, since the campaign began. will try to find out more.
‘They think we work there. This is great.’ She typed back:
i used to work there. not in the laboratory part. the cats are delivered at the back – that’s how they get them in without you seeing. do you know who would be behind the testing? or how I could find out?
She pressed ‘Send’ and a reply arrow appeared next to the mail she’d received. They waited in silence for a few seconds, and Millie was just about to click on their other mail, when a new mail flashed back up.
the lab is run by vak
kson, so testing probably being carried out by them. will look into this further. thanks for the tip.
‘And now we wait?’ asked Max.
‘Yes, I think so. Let’s look at our other mail.’ As Millie expected, it came from the .org protesters. Max was having some problems remembering who was who. She clicked on the second mail and read:
cats as well? do you want to do something about it?
‘What shall I put?’ she said, looking at the cat.
‘Say yes,’ he suggested.
‘OK.’ She typed:
yes, we do. will you help?
The reply came back immediately:
yes. keep me posted.
‘That looks promising,’ said Millie, as she logged out of the account. ‘Let’s look for any more information we can find about the laboratory online. My dad’s not going back there until next week, so we can’t find anything out from the building until then. Maybe I can try and find some more stuff here.’
‘We can’t do things any . . . faster?’ asked Max despondently.
‘I don’t think so,’ Millie apologised. ‘I know we need to help your friends. But I think we need to know more before we can rescue them. It’s going to be difficult.’
‘And dangerous.’ Max nodded.
The Net search proved fruitless. The keywords ‘Haverham laboratory’ and ‘Vakkson’ only ever took them to animal rights protest pages, or angry chat-rooms where people debated the pros and cons of animal testing.
‘I’m sorry, Max. I think we will have to wait for these guys to get back to us. Or for next week, when I can go out there with dad and see what I can find out.’
They sat, disconsolate, in the garden – Millie eating her cake and Max rolling grumpily on the lawn. Neither of them had the slightest idea that Millie’s dad and Bill had already received a phone call from the lab, asking if they could go back the next day for some extra cleaning work. And Millie’s dad, of course, had no idea when he agreed that the man who had telephoned him couldn’t have cared less about the state of the windows. He was just sure that one of the window cleaners must have seen his missing property and was determined to find out who knew exactly what.
Chapter Ten
Arthur Shepard hadn’t ever intended to be what his children, had they known what his job entailed, would certainly have described as ‘a bad man’. He had never been especially clever, and he had never worked especially hard, but the main reason he’d ended up with the life he had was because he didn’t especially care. About anybody, except Arthur Shepard. He had seemed to, briefly, at various times in his life – for example, in job interviews, or when he met the woman he would later, only half-interested in the response, ask to marry him, or when his children, whose names he could only sporadically remember, were born.
This was very much the pattern of his life: he didn’t work, as he claimed, to provide for his wife and children; he worked to get away from them. If a lie detector had been taped to his forehead and he had been asked if he loved his family, he would have said yes, and it would have registered nothing. Arthur Shepard genuinely thought he loved his family, because he had no idea what other people meant by the term ‘love’. But the truth was that if someone had asked him if he would rather see his children ill or be ill himself, see his wife unhappy or be unhappy himself, he would always, always have chosen for them to suffer, and to remain unhurt himself. He wasn’t ashamed of this, because he didn’t realise that someone else might answer the same question differently.
Nonetheless, Arthur had never expected to end up doing what he did now. He had moved from job to job over the years, and when he had begun to work for Vakkson, he hadn’t had any misgivings about a company with such a poor record in welfare and research. It was simply a well-paid job. When this particular scheme had presented itself to him, he hadn’t hesitated before seizing the opportunity with outstretched hands. The only problems that he had been able to see had been practical: where would they find the cats, where would they keep them, how would they transport them in secrecy, how could they avoid the prying eyes of the bleeding hearts campaigning, if you could call it that, outside the front gate. As each problem was resolved, Arthur Shepard felt the buzz of a job well done. The rights and wrongs of it simply never occurred to him.
In the first place, he had realised that they would need a reasonable number of cats for the development stage – several hundred, in fact. They couldn’t breed them, because cats take too long to mature – they didn’t have months to sit around waiting for gambolling kittens to become adult cats. It would have to be theft. He had also realised that if they stole them all from the Haverham area, the ensuing cat drought would not go unremarked by residents. Even if his staff broadened their search to the rest of the country, they ran the risk of being seen and traced to the laboratory. The most sensible thing was to do it abroad, in a rented van, and keep as much distance between the project and the outside world as possible. Belgium had been the ideal place to start – barely any distance from Calais and the Eurotunnel and car-ferries. The men transported the cats a dozen at a time – none of them was ever stopped, but if they had been, it would have been such a minor offence, they would not have been in much trouble. The transport had been easy to arrange: transfer the cats from the van to a car – customs were on the lookout for large-scale cigarette and alcohol smuggling, or illegal immigrants – they had no interest in a small car with tinted windows that contained only a few crates.
And, of course, his masterstroke had been to avoid any real harassment from the protesters, because Arthur Shepard owned them. Two men and three women were paid by him to keep the protest happening, so no real protesters could feel it was a cause no one cared about and decide to get involved, like the meddling idiots they were. These employees (he liked to think of them as moles, as he had always had a faint interest in spying) ran a mildly critical website, which copied everything that came into it to him. He believed there had been some sort of argument with a few meddling idiots, who’d decided that his moles were insufficiently committed to their cause, and had set up a rival website, but it was so small-scale that it caused him no real anxiety. Everything was running smoothly. Until yesterday.
Yesterday, he had not felt the buzz of a job well done. He had felt the queasy panic of a job mucked up. The technician who had been in charge of the cats was already in a great deal of trouble, and if Arthur could have fired him he would have, immediately, as an example to the others. But the problem with that was that the project was top secret, obviously, and the man was a great deal more dangerous to Arthur outside of the laboratory, where he might say something to somebody, than inside, where he would be sterilising Petri dishes for the next five years. The cat had escaped, which was infuriating and risky. But, more worryingly, it had escaped when there were outsiders on the property – those stupid window cleaners. If only Vakkson hadn’t hired them to keep the building clean. Any one of them could have seen something, and one of them probably had. Arthur felt no compunction as he rang them. He felt no guilt as he lied to the man to get them back there the next day. He simply took the opportunity to try and sort things out so that his cover wasn’t blown, his contract wasn’t terminated, he and several of his colleagues weren’t arrested, and he continued, as he expected, to be on the verge of making tens of millions of pounds.
Chapter Eleven
Millie could hardly believe her luck. Her dad had come home from work, explaining that there was an extra shift at the Haverham lab and that they had arranged to do it the very next day. However, she was also puzzled: they had surely cleaned every window the day before. But, it transpired, the lab had cleaning staff who looked after the doors and windows inside the building, while Millie, her dad and Bill cleaned the outside. There had been some sort of staff shortage, and so they were being called back to do some additional work. Millie had said she would probably come and help, trying not to make her dad suspicious by being too eager. She wandered off upstairs to find Max.
r /> ‘I might get some answers sooner than we thought – we’ve been asked to go back to the lab tomorrow,’ she said, closing the door behind her.
‘What? Why?’
‘Windows need cleaning indoors, apparently.’
‘Has this ever happened before?’ Max asked.
Millie shook her head. ‘No . . . I don’t think so. Why?’
‘It could be a trap, don’t you think? They might think you have seen something.’ Max paced worriedly up and down her bedroom floor.
‘Hmmm. Maybe. They didn’t ask for me to go, though. Just Dad and Bill.’ Millie tried to weigh up the possibilities.
‘But they cannot ask for you, of course. It would be too suspicious.’
‘I suppose so,’ Millie agreed. It wasn’t very likely that they would book some window cleaners and ask them to bring a twelve-year-old girl with them. It would sound, at best, dodgy. ‘Do you think I shouldn’t go? Dad will be there. And Bill. And we’ll be inside the building – I might be able to find something out that would help us.’
‘That’s true.’ Max continued to pace. ‘I think, though, that it will be a risk for you to go tomorrow. Are you sure you want to?’
‘How else will we find out who’s doing this?’ Millie couldn’t see any alternative.
‘I know. But you must be prepared for people to ask you questions,’ Max warned her.
‘That man asked me questions as soon as you’d escaped, and I was OK,’ she pointed out.
‘Millie, I know. I am not doubting your abilities. I just want you to remember that these men do not have the same ideas as you about what is right and what is wrong. If they’re willing to kidnap crate-loads of cats, they may not think twice about kidnapping, or even hurting, a little girl.’
‘I’m not little. And I won’t be on my own.’
The Great Escape Page 4