Martin King and the Space Angels (Martin King Series)

Martin King and the Space Angels (Martin King Series) Read Free Page A

Book: Martin King and the Space Angels (Martin King Series) Read Free
Author: James McGovern
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His blotched face was overgrown with six months’ worth of beard.
    ‘Sleep well?’ said Martin.
    ‘What? Yes.’
    ‘I said—did you sleep well?’
    ‘Yes! I said yes—what’s the damn matter with you?’
    Their flat was poorly lit and very untidy. Martin tidied up whenever he got the time, but he always seemed to be busy with homework. A fly buzzed around the bare light-bulb, and Martin glanced around the living room. The carpet was torn, the back of the TV was cracked and covered with sellotape, and the coffee table was covered in a thick layer of dust.
    It had been three days since Falcon’s visit to Earth. Despite what the alien had told them, none of the three friends had developed any sort of special power. The Axis Dust had done nothing. The events of that night now seemed like a faded dream.
    Martin pulled the brass monocle from around his neck, where it was hanging from its leather strap, and ran his fingers over the edge, as if convincing himself that it was real. He held the lens up to his eye and surveyed his dad through it. It revealed nothing. He just saw his father, the same as ever, lying in a stain of his own sweat.
    ‘What’s that?’
    ‘Nothing.’
    Martin pushed the monocle back behind his shirt.
    ‘Damn kid. Nothing? Damn kid.’
    ‘I’m going to school now, dad. See you later.’
    ‘Damn kid.’
    Martin hoisted his backpack onto his shoulder and left the room. He reached the end of the corridor and stood before the lift.
    The lift. Martin pressed the glowing switch, and the steel doors rattled open. Inside, the lights were dim and a tall mirror spat back a slightly warped reflection. Martin took a step forward.
    ‘It’s just a lift,’ he said, under his breath. ‘It’s just a lift.’
    But it wasn’t. It wasn’t just a lift. It was a steel tomb, a coffin, a death trap. He took a step backwards.
    Martin and his dad lived at the top of a tower block, and Martin stood outside the lift every day, preparing himself to climb fearlessly into the tiny box.
    Martin hated any enclosed space, but lifts were the worst. He knew that his fear was irrational, but he could never stop himself wondering what if…?
    What if I got stuck in the lift, and died from lack of water before anyone found me? Or what if I ran out of oxygen in there? Or what if the lift came loose from its cable and crashed down to the ground—with me inside it?
    But Martin felt that, maybe, if he could summon the courage to travel in a lift all his other problems would also be solved. He would no longer seize up with rigidness around girls at school. He would have the bravery to ask Darcy to go out with him.
    So every day he would stare at the lift, and the lift would stare back, and Martin would keep pressing the button, keep opening up the elevator when it closed, keep staring into the metal box… and then eventually he would walk away and take the stairs.
    Today was no exception. Martin sighed, and turned his back on the lift. There’s always tomorrow , he thought, I’ve got enough to worry about at the moment—XO5, and the end of the world. There’s always tomorrow…
    As Martin made his way down the hundreds of worn steps, his drunken father pulled himself upright and glanced at an old photograph.
     
    *
     
    Darcy and Martin sat together by the dirty classroom window, staring out at the slanting rain. Mr Slater, their maths teacher, was standing at the whiteboard explaining algebra, or circles, or something, and Martin watched the storm through the brass monocle.
    Outside, the trees were shivering, the pond was restless, and the plants had drowned. A lot of things had died since the storms began, and the grass had faded away into the mud. The swollen ceiling of cloud still hung over the planet. Martin knew now that the storm was a bad omen. It meant that the world was going to end.
    Martin longed to speak to Darcy, but the classroom was quiet and he didn’t want people to listen.
    He glanced around the classroom

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