The Talisman (The Talisman #1)

'Can't, Jacky, can't stay cool, bad . . . '

Their door was going to open in a minute and Bast or Sonny Singer would be there . . . maybe both. They were not 'out for confession,' whatever that was, and while newcomers to the Sunlight Home might be allowed a few screw-ups during their orientation period, Jack thought their chances for escape would be better if they blended in as completely as they could as soon as they could. With Wolf, that wasn't going to be easy. Christ, I'm sorry I got you into this, big guy, Jack thought. But the situation is what the situation is. And if we can't ride it, it's gonna ride us down. So if I'm hard with you, it's for your own good. He added miserably to himself, I hope.

'Wolf,' he whispered, 'do you want Singer to start beating on me again?'

'No, Jack, no . . . '

'Then you better come out in the hall with me,' Jack said. 'You have to remember that what you do is going to have a lot to do with how Singer and that guy Bast treat me. Singer slapped me around because of your stones - '

'Someone might slap him around,' Wolf said. His voice was low and mild, but his eyes suddenly narrowed, flared orange. For a moment Jack saw the gleam of white teeth between Wolf's lips - not as if Wolf had grinned, but as if his teeth had grown.

'Don't even think of that,' Jack said grimly. 'It'll only makes things worse.' Wolf's arms fell away from his head. 'Jack, I don't know . . . '

'Will you try?' Jack asked. He threw another urgent glance at the door.

'I'll try,' Wolf whispered shakily. Tears shone in his eyes.

2

The upstairs corridor should have been bright with late-afternoon light, but it wasn't. It was as if some sort of filtering device had been fitted over the windows at the end of the corridor so that the boys could see out - out to where the real sunlight was - but that the light itself wasn't allowed to enter. It seemed to drop dead on the narrow inner sills of those high Victorian windows.

There were forty boys standing in front of twenty doors, ten on each side. Jack and Wolf were by far the last to appear, but their lateness was not noticed. Singer, Bast, and two other boys had found someone to rag and could not be bothered with taking attendance.

Their victim was a narrow-chested, bespectacled kid of maybe fifteen. He was standing at a sorry approximation of attention with his chinos puddled around his black shoes. He wore no underpants.

'Have you stopped it yet?' Singer asked.

'I - '

'Shut up!' One of the other boys with Singer and Bast yelled this last. The four of them wore blue jeans instead of chinos, and clean white turtleneck sweaters. Jack learned soon enough that the fellow who had just shouted was War-wick. The fat fourth was Casey.

'When we want you to talk, we'll ask you!' Warwick shouted now. 'You still whipping your weasel, Morton?' Morton trembled and said nothing.

'ANSWER HIM!' Casey shrieked. He was a tubby boy who looked a little bit like a malevolent Tweedledum.

'No,' Morton whispered.

'WHAT? SPEAK UP!' Singer yelled.

'No!' Morton moaned.

'If you can stop for a whole week, you'll get your underpants back,' Singer said with the air of one conferring a great favor on an undeserving subject. 'Now pull up your pants, you little creep.'

Morton, sniffling, bent over and pulled up his trousers.

The boys went down to confession and supper.

3

Confession was held in a large bare-walled room across the way from the dining hall. The maddening smells of baked beans and hotdogs drifted across, and Jack could see Wolf's nostrils flaring rhythmically. For the first time that day the dull expression left his eyes and he began to look interested.