The White Widow’s Revenge. Jacob Grey
Читать онлайн книгу.“Those two …” Lydia pointed to the floor, “probably won’t even notice I’m gone.”
Angry muffled voices filtered up through the carpet.
“We should at least tell Crumb,” said Caw. “And there’s a new guy – a coyote feral …”
Lydia nodded at her alarm clock – it was just after midnight. “You’re going to wake them up? We can hardly go into the asylum with an army,” she said. “Look, Caw – you only need me.”
She spoke firmly, but Caw could hear the faintest hint of a plea in her words. She needs to get away from here, he realised.
“You’re right,” he said.
“Great!” said Lydia breezily. A smile lit up her freckled face. “Let’s go catch some flies!”
s Caw and Lydia climbed down the drainpipe, Caw caught a glimpse through the living-room window of Mr Strickham slumped on the sofa, staring vacantly ahead.
“Maybe we should talk to your mum?” Caw said as his feet hit the ground, but he already knew what the answer would be.
“Please don’t, Caw. It’ll only set them off again. Besides, this is just a fact-finding mission. It won’t be dangerous.”
Caw instinctively scoured the garden for any foxes, glad not to find any watching them. Maybe Velma Strickham really had banished her foxes from her home. Caw felt a bit guilty about keeping things from her. But he’d done plenty for Mrs Strickham already, letting her invite everyone into his house. She didn’t need to know his every move.
“Let me get us a ride,” said Caw. He looked towards the sky and clenched his fists, ready to call the crows.
“Don’t,” said Lydia, touching his arm. “If there are flies about, they might see us.”
“Then how will we get there?” asked Caw. “The asylum is right on the edge of Blackstone.”
“The number sixty-two bus!” said Lydia. “It might be public but it’s under the radar.”
I’m not travelling on a bus, said Shimmer. It’s undignified.
“You three can meet us there,” said Caw. “Just keep low and out of sight.”
Ooh, a secret mission! said Screech, hopping along the top of the Strickhams’ fence. Exciting!
You’d better be careful, said Glum. They’ll probably want to keep you there indefinitely.
Very funny, said Screech.
“Will you quit it?” said Caw.
Lydia grinned. “Hey, it’s good to see you guys again,” she said.
It’s hard to fly in a straitjacket. Just saying, added Glum.
Keep up, old-timer, said Screech.
Unsurprisingly, Caw and Lydia were the only people on the bus. The driver didn’t even seem to notice them as they got on board. Caw found it strange to feel the soft rumble of an engine beneath him, and it reassured him to watch the crows keep pace outside. He’d only travelled by car or bus a handful of times in his life and it was a relief to step off when they reached their stop. The doors snapped closed and the bus pulled away into the night. Caw watched its red rear lights vanish over a hill.
They were right on the outskirts of Blackstone, where the city’s residential suburbs gave way to scattered industrial buildings, factories and farms. Caw had been here only once before, when he was much younger, exploring with his crows. The bus depot was half a mile up the road, according to Lydia, and there was no other traffic and no pavement.
The Blackstone Psychiatric Hospital sign was painted on a rotting wooden panel set just back from the road. The building itself looked more like a spooky old mansion than a hospital, perched on raised ground, its turrets and towers piercing the sky.
Looks homely, said Shimmer. I like what they’ve done with the bars on the windows.
“It’s one of the oldest buildings in the city,” said Lydia with a glimmer in her eye. “It was built in the early 1700s.”
Caw nodded mutely. The psychiatric hospital wasn’t all ancient though. There were a couple of ugly extensions on either side – plain, windowless, single-storey bunkers – sprawling across the grounds. Spotlights cast eerie pale arcs of light through the deep shadows. There was a mesh fence, about three metres high, and beyond that a wall. Caw shivered. If you were a patient here, you were obviously a prisoner too.
There was a large front gate with a guardhouse next to it. Inside, Caw could see a man in uniform reading a magazine with his feet up.
“What now?” said Lydia. “I have a feeling visiting hours are over.”
Caw looked sideways at his friend. “I have a better plan.”
“Disable the fence?” asked Lydia, rubbing her hands together.
Caw shook his head. He’d already begun to summon the crows as soon as he stepped off the bus. Now they started to arrive, a wave of dark shapes flitting overhead, joining Screech, Glum and Shimmer. Caw guessed they could sense the electric current humming through the second fence, because they landed only on the first.
The guard looked up briefly then went back to reading.
“Flies or not,” Caw said, “it’s the best way.”
Lydia held out her arms. “Come on then, give me a lift.”
The crows landed across their shoulders and lifted Caw and Lydia off the ground.
His friend was grinning madly. “I love this bit!” she said.
Caw directed his birds to swoop over the gates and the hospital itself. From above, they could see that the asylum was built round two central courtyards. Too out in the open. The crows carried them across the steeply pitched roof, and then he spotted something more promising. Caw steered them towards a flat section scattered with bulky chimney flues. The crows set them down lightly then gathered on the rooftop. There were no security lights or cameras up here.
A light breeze gusted through his clothes as Caw picked his way between the chimney stacks. The turrets were huge up close.
“I don’t fancy squeezing down a chimney,” whispered Lydia.
Caw stopped by a metal hatch in the rooftop, with a simple looped handle. It looked newer than the rest of the building, and a couple of modern air vents had been fixed beside it.
“Hopefully we won’t have to,” he said.
He reached down and tugged on the loop. It opened half a centimetre, but then snagged. Caw pulled harder but it didn’t budge.
“It’s locked from the inside,” he said.
“Oh well, good try,” said Lydia. “I guess we go through the courtyard.”
Caw peered down over the edge. There were more security spotlights mounted on the walls, but it looked like they were switched off.
“Shimmer, do a sweep for any guards,” he said.
The crow took off, diving down over the edge of the roof. As she approached ground level, several of the lights blinked on, casting the courtyard in silvery light. Caw heard an electronic hum and saw cameras rotating to focus on the empty space. Shimmer banked and flapped skywards again, rejoining them just as a guard wandered