Deviant
180 pages
English

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180 pages
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Description

Danny Lopez is new in town. He made a mistake back home in Las Vegas, and now he has landed at an experimental school in Colorado for tough cases. At the Cobalt Charter School, everything is scriptedwhat the teachers say, what the students replyand no other speaking is allowed. This supercontrolled environment gives kids a second chance to make something of themselves. But with few freedoms, the students become sitting ducks for a killer determined to clean up Colorado Springs.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 octobre 2011
Nombre de lectures 2
EAN13 9781613121870
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 3 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0705€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

PUBLISHER S NOTE: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
McKinty, Adrian. Deviant/Adrian McKinty. p. cm.
Summary: Fourteen-year-old Danny Lopez reviews the path that led him from Las Vegas, Nevada, to an experimental school near Colorado Springs and then to his imminent death at the hands of a cat-killer ready for bigger prey. ISBN 978-0-8109-8420-2 (alk. paper) [1. Moving, Household-Fiction. 2. Junior high schools-Fiction. 3. Schools-Fiction. 4. Stepfathers-Fiction. 5. Family life-Colorado-Fiction. 6. Secret societies-Fiction. 7. Psychopaths-Fiction. 8. Colorado Springs (Colo.)-Fiction.] I. Title. PZ7.M4786915De 2011 [Fic]-dc22 2010023465
Text copyright 2011 Adrian McKinty Book design by Maria T. Middleton
Published in 2011 by Amulet Books, an imprint of ABRAMS. All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. Amulet Books and Amulet Paperbacks are registered trademarks of Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
Amulet Books are available at special discounts when purchased in quantity for premiums and promotions as well as fundraising or educational use. Special editions can also be created to specification. For details, contact specialsales@abramsbooks.com or the address below.
www.abramsbooks.com
For I will consider my cat Jeoffry For he keeps the Lord s watch in the night against the adversary For he counteracts the Devil, who is death, by brisking about the life.
-Christopher Smart, from Jubilate Agno (1758)
Contents
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Part One: The Letters of Indrid Cold
One: Cat Killer
Two: Leaving Las Vegas
Three: The New Student
Four: The Girl Next Door
Five: The Prison
Six: Direct Instruction
Seven: A Conversation with the Demons
Eight: Something Wicked This Way Comes
Nine: The Executioner s Son
Ten: The First Cat
Eleven: The Phylogenetic Scale
Twelve: Monday Morning, 10:15
Thirteen: A Message from Indrid Cold
Part Two: In the Shadow of the Coil
Fourteen: Camera Obscura
Fifteen: Parents Night
Sixteen: Detention
Seventeen: The Apex of the Pentangle
Eighteen: The Narrow Road to the Deep North
Nineteen: Hunters in the Snow
Twenty: The Visitors
Twenty-one: L Is for . . .
Twenty-two: The Coil
Twenty-three: Spring
Twenty-four: I, Indrid Cold
About the Author

The mangled sounds of civilization faded slowly as he walked into the black nothingness of the desert.
His boots crunched sand, the snow slid off his coat. He moved carefully through the scrub and ground cactus and turned at last into the rock canyon. Here he was shielded from the traffic noise and the arc lamps on the federal prisons that lit up much of the lower mountain. He kept moving west until the ambient light dimmed and the stars began showing themselves. Finally he reached that place on the trail where all was quiet and even the Union Pacific trains were nothing but a distant rumble in the dark.
They were gone now, the people, their talk, their city.
He was alone.
What is it about silence that frightens us so? he wondered. Is it the prospect of being left with one s own thoughts? For some this was a torment, a dreadful confrontation with the terrible emptiness within.
He never felt that.
He liked quiet.
He shrugged. It was unimportant. He had a job to do in this place.
For the Ute Indians this natural amphitheater between great red sandstone columns was a holy place. Among these inanimate rocks the Ute chiefs and medicine men had worshipped and made offerings, pledging themselves to unknown gods in forgotten ceremonies. And before the Ute there were other peoples who had venerated this spot. For thousands of years the Native Americans had been coming here. And before the Indians, before people, this was a seabed and dinosaurs had walked the shore.
He wondered what God had been doing then. Watching the dull herds of stegosauruses, waiting for something more interesting to come along. God s patience, like his love and wisdom, must also be infinite, he thought dubiously.
He coughed. His blood was rich with adrenaline and his tongue was dry, bitter, thick in his mouth. He was shaking. As he shone his flashlight between the sandstone henges, the beam wobbled involuntarily.
Is anybody there? he called.
There was no reply and snow damped the echo, making his voice sound weird-strained, high-pitched, the way it had been before he d gone to his speech pathologist, Miss Leahy.
He forced it down an octave and tried again. Is anyone there?
And this time it was a little better.
Is , he began a third time, and stopped.
There was no one there.
It was snowing just hard enough to keep everyone indoors. This was a popular location though. The long-distance runners from the US Olympic Training Center sometimes came out this way, and the alert battalion of the Tenth Special Forces Division often hit the mountain trails first thing in the morning. Sooner or later someone would certainly find the sacrifice. That wasn t the problem; the problem was getting them to take notice of it. Out here there were always a lot of small animal corpses: possums, squirrels, raccoons and if he didn t display the corpse correctly, the soldiers would probably take it for a coyote kill.
He looked at the bag in his left hand. See? You think it s easy, but it s not that easy, he said.
He poked the bag with his finger and the cat thrashed weakly against the sides. There was a little fight left in it, but not much.
Well, I suppose we better get started, he said.
He set the bag on the sand and took off his backpack.
He breathed the night air and looked at the stars. The Dipper had moved in the sky, but the moon was still hiding itself.
I wonder what time it is, he muttered.
He looked at the luminous hands on his watch. Twelve! Already twelve! He was troubled, but not really that surprised. All aspects of this plan had taken him much longer than he had bargained for. Longer to get his gear, longer to get to the girl s house.
And then of course her parents had decided not to go to the cinema after all.
Foiled at the very first attempt!
He had headed home utterly dejected.
But then he had spotted the stray, merely by chance next to the Dumpster behind the gas station.
A small black-and-white tomcat who was trusting, far too trusting , of humans.
He wondered if the Master would be happy with this. Would he commend him for his improvisation?
And maybe it wasn t a stray. Maybe it belonged to someone who right now was calling the police
A slight stir of panic.
A quickening of the pulse.
But then he calmed himself.
No one had seen him. No one would ever find him here.
Even so, the next time he would have a backup plan.
He breathed deeply and shone the flashlight around the rocky amphitheater until he found the famous sacrifice stone that was covered with ancient symbols and modern graffiti.
There it is, he said aloud.
He walked over, placed the backpack on the rock, unzipped the central pocket, and took out his multi-tool.
On a whim he turned the flashlight off.
Total darkness.
He liked that.
Mr. Boyle, the mathematics teacher, claimed that on planets whose spin was fast, night did not last very long and in binary star systems there were planets with no night at all-as one sun set, another rose.
What a hideous prospect, he thought.
He turned the flashlight back on, picked up the cat bag, unlooped the string from the top, reached in, and grabbed the animal. The cat cried. Not a hiss but a full-bodied cry of pain and terror.
He grinned. Oh but you haven t seen the half of it, my little friend, he said.
It clawed at him but he was holding it by the scruff of the neck and wearing the thick falconer s glove the Master had bought on eBay. A cat could scratch and bite him but couldn t penetrate the thick leather. He watched as the animal desperately tried to harm him. It didn t have a chance.
The cat fought pointlessly for a minute and then gave a great screech of terror.
Ssshhh, he said and pushed it down onto the rock, holding it tightly by the neck. He squeezed on its carotid, choking the flow of oxygen to its brain. The cat ceased fighting and stared at him out of almond-shaped, starlight-reflecting eyes.
Well, now, cat, I ll bet you have no idea what s in store, do you? he said.
The cat hissed.
What s the matter? Don t you know who I am?
The cat hissed again and he squeezed harder.
I ll tell you who I am. I am the object of your transfiguration. I deliver you from this vale of tears.
With his left hand around the cat s throat he picked up the penknife multi-tool with his right.
He tried to unhook the blade but he found that this was awkward in the dark.
He pushed hard on the knife blade, but it wouldn t come. One-handed, he couldn t quite get purchase on the blade tip and was unable to lever it out.
Always something unexpected, he muttered.
Next time he would open the multi-tool first and place the blade on the rock, ready to go.
The cat began shivering. Convulsing. What was the matter with the thing? Was it having a heart attack? Did cats have heart attacks?
He once again tried to hook the blade out on the rock but still it wouldn t come.
Oh, this is ridiculous, he muttered. Come on.
He pushed and pushed, but what was needed was an opposable thumb. He considered his options for a moment. The best thing to do was to put the cat back in the bag and start it all again with the multi-tool open.
Yes.
He shoved the cat back inside the canvas sack. Only a reprieve, not a pa

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