Stormbreaker

Stormbreaker by Anthony Horowitz Page B

Book: Stormbreaker by Anthony Horowitz Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anthony Horowitz
Tags: Juvenile Fiction, Boys & Men
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shoulders and Alex watched them shuffle over to the side and then throw themselves out. For a moment they were there, frozen in the doorway. Then they were gone like a photograph crumpled and spun away by the wind. Two more men followed. Then another two. Wolf would be the last to leave-and with Alex not jumping he would be on his own.
    It took less than a minute. Suddenly Alex was aware that only he and Wolf were left.
    “Move it!” the assistant pilot shouted above the roar of the engines.
          Wolf picked himself up. His eyes briefly met Alex's and in that moment Alex knew. Wolf was a popular leader. He was tough and he was fast-completing a thirty-mile hike as if it were just a stroll in a park. But he had a weak spot. Somehow he'd allowed this parachute jump to get to him and he was too scared to move. It was hard to believe, but there he was, frozen in the doorway, his arms rigid, staring out. Alex glanced back. The assistant pilot was looking the other way. He hadn't seen what was happening. And when he did? If Wolf failed to make the jump, it would be the end of his training and maybe even the end of his career. Even hesitating would be bad enough. He'd be binned.
    Alex thought for a moment. Wolf hadn't moved. Alex could see his shoulders rising and falling as he tried to summon up the courage to go. Ten seconds had passed. Maybe more. The assistant pilot was leaning down, stowing away a piece of equipment. Alex stood up. “Wolf. . . ” he said.
    Wolf didn't hear him.
    Alex took one last quick look at the assistant Pilot, then kicked out with all his strength. His foot slammed into Wolf's backside. He'd put all his strength behind it. Wolf was caught by surprise, his hands coming free as he plunged into the swirling night air.
    The assistant pilot turned around and saw Alex. “What are you doing?” he shouted.
    “Just stretching my legs,” Alex shouted back.
    The plane curved in the air and began the journey home.
    Mrs. Jones was waiting for him when he walked into the hangar. She was sitting at a table, wearing a gray silk jacket and trousers with a black handkerchief flowing out of her top pocket. For a moment she didn't recognize him. Alex was dressed in a flying suit. His hair was damp from the rain. His face was pinched with tiredness, and he seemed to have grown older over the past two weeks. None of the men had arrived back yet. A truck had been sent to collect them from a field about two miles away.
    “Alex. . .” she said.
    Alex looked at her but said nothing.
    “It was my decision to stop you from jumping,” she said. “I hope you're not disappointed. I just thought it was too much of a risk. Please. Sit down.”
    Alex sat down opposite her.
    “I have something that might cheer you up,” she went on. “I've brought you some toys.”
    “I'm too old for toys,” Alex said.
    “Not these toys.”
    She signaled and a man appeared, walking out of the shadows, carrying a tray of equipment that he set down on the table. The man was enormously fat. When he sat down, the metal chair disappeared beneath the spread of his buttocks, and Alex was surprised it could even take his weight. He was bald with a black mustache and several chins, each one melting into the next and finally into his neck and shoulders. He wore a pinstriped suit, which must have used enough material to make a tent.
    “Smithers,” he said, nodding at Alex. “Very nice to meet you, old chap.”
    “What have you got for him?” Mrs. Jones demanded.
    “I'm afraid we haven't had a great deal of time, Mrs. J,” Smithers replied. “The challenge was to think what a fourteen -year -old might carry with him-arid adapt it.” He picked the first object off the tray. A yo-yo. It was slightly larger than normal, black plastic. “Let's start with this,” Smithers said.
    Alex shook his head. He couldn't believe any of this. “Don't tell me,” he exclaimed, "it's some sort of secret weapon....
    “Not exactly. I was told you

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