A Room Full of Killers by Michael Wood (spanish books to read .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Michael Wood
Read book online ยซA Room Full of Killers by Michael Wood (spanish books to read .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Michael Wood
โYou been to see Call Me Fred?โ Lee Marriott was a thin boy with brilliant blond hair, piercing blue eyes, and skin so pale he was almost translucent.
Ryan smiled. โYeah. Just finished the tests.โ
โHereโs a tip: when he gets on a subject he really likes he spits when he talks; so always lean back when he comes near you.โ
โCheers.โ
โYou any good at pool?โ
โNot really.โ
โTable tennis?โ
โA bit.โ
โWeโll have a game after tea if you want.โ
โYeah. Sure. Thanks.โ
โNo problem.โ Lee moved up the sofa so he was next to Ryan. โLook, donโt worry about this place. Itโs scary at first but youโll soon settle in. Miss Moloneyโs all right as long as youโre all right by her, and the other staff are pretty cool too. As for the rest of us lot, we all get along just fine โ we have to really,โ he sniggered.
โThanks.โ
โLetโs have that game now. I fucking hate Star Wars.โ
By the time the evening meal came around at 6 p.m, Ryan had spoken to all seven boys and was relatively relaxed in their company. There were a couple who seemed a bit distant but, when he factored in the reason why they were all here, he could perfectly understand that.
Ryan entered the dining room with Jacob, Mark, and Lewis. They were laughing and joking. To the outsider they looked like four school pals on their lunch break. Once they were seated the plastic cutlery gave away the seriousness of where they were.
Ryan had been too knotted up to eat at lunchtime. Now he had settled in and relaxed with his contemporaries for a few hours, he found he was hungry, and was the first to finish his bland chicken dinner. They all chatted between mouthfuls: safe subjects like football, TV, and the fact Mark Parker couldnโt do more than ten press-ups in the gym.
Following dessert (soggy treacle sponge and lumpy custard), it was back into the recreation room for a few hours before they went to bed at nine oโclock.
Ryan beat Lee easily at table tennis but there was no malice, no arguments, no threats of reprisals โ it was all good-natured fun.
Nine oโclock came far too quickly for Ryanโs liking and he was soon locked up in his small room (not a cell). He was finally alone after a hectic first day at Starling House. He wasnโt tired. It had been years since he had a bedtime. As he lay wide awake on the single bed, looking up at the ceiling with its cracked paint and damp patches, his mind drifted. How did he end up here? Where were his mum and dad? What were they calling themselves now?
The room was sparse. A single pine bed with matching bedside cabinet. A cheap veneer wardrobe secured to the wall and a plastic chair. There was one shelf which had a few dusty paperbacks. The room lacked atmosphere and there was a cold draft coming from somewhere. There was nothing personal or comforting about it. He wondered what the other boysโ rooms were like. Had they brought items from home: posters, photographs, games? He wondered if he was allowed to visit the other boys in their rooms. Something else to ask Lee in the morning.
Ryan listened to the silence. He couldnโt hear anything from the outside, no traffic on the roads, no people walking by. He wondered how far he was from civilisation. Heโd never been to Sheffield before so had no idea of the layout. It was in Yorkshire, which had two shit football teams, was about all he knew. He remembered his uncle coming up to Sheffield for the snooker once when Ryan was a little boy but that was the only time the city was mentioned in his house.
There were no sounds coming from anywhere else in the building. He strained to hear any of the other boys talking, either to themselves or each other through the walls, or any of them crying, but he guessed the walls were too thick.
He took a deep breath and sighed. His first full night in Starling House. His first of many. Lee and Jacob had made the first day manageable but he would give anything to be back home with his mum and dad, to be hugged by them one more time.
A tear fell from his eye, down his face and onto his pillow.
โIโm so sorry, Mum. For everything I did. Iโm really sorry,โ he said, quietly, under his breath. โPlease find it in your heart to forgive me. I need to see you.โ
Ryan turned over and hid his face into his pillow to muffle the sound of his sobbing. Just because he couldnโt hear anyone else, it didnโt mean they couldnโt hear him.
He cried uncontrollably; cried himself to sleep. He was just nodding off when his door was unlocked from the outside.
LEE MARRIOTT
Blackpool. August 2013
I was born by accident. Itโs not that my parents didnโt want me, they did, well, Mum did. Itโs just that I was a surprise for them both.
Mum and Dad had tried for years to have a baby. They married when Dad was twenty-five and Mum was twenty-one. They tried from the honeymoon onwards but nothing happened. Twenty years later, out I popped. I was their middle-age miracle.
Iโve heard that story so many times from Mum that I could give a lecture on it. I could go on that boring quiz show with the leather chair and have it as my specialist subject. At first it was a sweet story, as if I had waited more than twenty years for the right time to be born, or the angels were preparing my mum and dad to be the best parents ever (thatโs a direct quote from Mumโs story, by the way โ pathetic, isnโt it?). After hearing it more than ten million times it starts to get annoying;
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