Jack wanted to run. But even when the helicopter's machine guns opened up, tearing chunks of masonry from the terrace's fa?ade, smashing holes in roofs, shattering those few whole windows that remained, all he could do was look at his father.
The helicopter was hovering above the opposite row of houses, and Reaper faced up to it as bullets impacted all around him. He seemed to be drawing a long, deep breath.
Jack dropped to his stomach just as his father screamed. It was a short, sharp sound, but louder than anything Jack had ever heard before in his life. A grunt of unimaginable volume, it caused a storm of movement across the street: dust and shrapnel was driven away as though by a huge storm; bodies of dead rooks fluttered through the air once more; windows and doors, all but untouched on that side of the street, blew inwards.
The shout struck the helicopter, and it went into a spin. Bullets raked along the street as its guns continued firing, tearing up the ground a few feet from Jack's face and ripping through the tangle of crashed, blackened cars. Then the shooting stopped, and the aircraft dropped as though punched from above. It hit the row of houses and sank in, rotors shredding two roofs of tiles and timber and filling the air with chaos once more. Walls blew out, floors collapsed, and the sudden quiet after the crash was stunning.
Jack lifted himself and looked around to make sure everyone he loved was okay. Sparky and the others peered out from the house once again, and along the street the other Superiors picked themselves up, dusted themselves down.
Reaper stood where he had been before, staring at the downed aircraft. He smiled.
Jack looked at the new wreck as well, and through the ruin of a house's fa?ade he saw movement as people tried to climb from the twisted metal and piled masonry.
The second shout came without warning. More directed this time, still the volume was agonising and unbelievable, and Jack fell to his knees with his hands clasping bloodied ears.
The helicopter exploded. It was a small blast, but the fuel tanks ignited, and the fire spread quickly.
People started screaming.
Reaper was smiling wider now.
“Dad, get them out,” Jack said.
“Never call me that,” Reaper said. Jack realised that he was more than aware of what was happening, who had found him, and why Jack was here.
It simply did not matter.
The screaming from the burning helicopter was terrible, and Jack walked back and forth with his hands over his ears, hating what he was hearing but unable to do anything about it. He felt the heat of the flames on his back as he turned to his father, and past him to the house. Jenna and Sparky were standing by the front door, holding each other as they watched, but Lucy-Anne was trotting along the street with the boy with rooks on his shoulders.
There were a series of smaller blasts from the fire as ammunition ignited, and the last of the screams was cut off.
“No,” Jack said, not wanting to see his dad like this, not wishing to believe the man who had loved him and read to him and played football with him could be standing here with the burnt-flesh smell of his victims hanging in the air. And smiling. He was still smiling.
Jack ran past his father towards Sparky and Jenna, and as he passed he muttered, “Bastard.”
“You okay?” Sparky asked.
“Yeah. You?” Jack's friends nodded.
“You're bleeding,” Jenna said, nodding down at Jack's leg. There was a wound in his calf that poured blood, and his trouser leg and shoe were sodden.
“Doesn't matter,” he said. “Can't feel it.”
“Your dad's nice,” Sparky said.
Reaper was walking slowly along the street, his shadow dancing beside him as he passed the flaming wreck. The fire had spread to the houses’ structures now, and smoke was seeping from the roofs of buildings several doors along. Soon, the whole terrace would go up.
“I can't give up on him,” Jack said.
“Jack, he could kill you.” Jenna stepped forward and held his face in her hands, and he saw the pity in her eyes. He hated that.