now instead of handcuffs and shoved him toward one of the rigged nets.
The Top Dog stepped forward. âListen to me!â he shouted. He also had a funny accent, but this one was more like what Mr. Nasir-Nassaad should have had but didnât, weird and guttural and scary. âYou are all prisoners of war.â
Rory expected one of the teachers, maybe Mr. Treadway, who was widely regarded as the meanest man in the school, to say something back. Mr. Treadway was always going on about how America was the worst country in history, which made most people in Edwardsville plenty mad, and how the white man was the worst man in history, but since he taught social studies it was more or less okay. Indeed, Rory had wanted to go find some black people to apologize to, but there werenât all that many of them in Edwardsville, and his parents wouldnât let him go to East St. Louis, where apparently they were pretty easy to find.
With a shotgun taped beneath his chin, though, Mr. Treadway wasnât quite as brave as his reputation.
Rory tried to catch his sisterâs eye, but as he turned to look her way a blow to the side of his head got his full attention. When the stars stopped shooting, he could see that it was the Top Dog, who had just hit him a glancing blow with the butt of his rifle.
âYou donât move! You donât move unless I say so! You hear me?ââhe was addressing his remarks to the assembly now. âNone of you sons of bitches moves unless I say so. Eyes straight ahead! Eyes straight ahead! Or else!â
Everybody froze. The Top Dog turned away from Rory.
Now an unusual emotion began to well up inside him. Practically from birth, Rory had been taught to hide his emotions, to conceal them, suppress them, be afraid of them. It wasnât nice to feel bad things, and it was even less nice to express them. Boys, his teachers told him, were different now: they didnât yell, they didnât fight, even when they wanted to, they got along, even when they didnât want to. Not to conform was to risk a trip to Mr. Nasty-Nosyâs office or, worse, to the Infirmary, where Nurse Haskell gave you a couple of those pills that supposedly settled you down.
Be nice, they told you. But he didnât want to be nice any more. He didnât want to be afraid any more. He wanted to fight, the way Charles had fought.
âPlease, please.â It was Nurse Haskell. She was crying, which was making it difficult for her to keep her arms in the right position.
The Top Dog saw her struggles, heard her entreaties. He came over. He took her by the arm and led her toward the center of the gym floor, where Mr. Nasir-Nassaad was lying. He slipped his arms around her waist, propping up her elbows, and waltzed her around a bit.
Then he laughed in her face and released her.
Unsupported, her elbows dropped. She twisted her head just in timeâso instead of blowing off the top of her skull, the force of the blast took off the lower half of Nurse Haskellâs jaw, sending her teeth showering over those unlucky enough to be close by.
She fell across Mr. Nasir-Nassaad, writhing. Several of the female teachers screamed. But the children were stock-still, as they had been ordered.
The terrorists just laughed. And nobody laughed louder or longer than the Top Dog.
âOkay, okay,â he shouted. âNow you see. You see what happens when you fuck with me. Nothing good. But, stillâI can be merciful.â
Nurse Haskell was still alive, trying to move, trying to moan, even without a mouth. It was hideous. The Top Dog watched her agony for a few moments, then shot her in what remained of her head.
Rory looked across the gym at Emma, who was staring back at him with fear in her eyes. He wanted to rush to her, to protect her. He couldnât do that. But he did know one thing: there was no fear in the glance he shot back at her. Just anger.
The Top Dog put away his gun and looked at