different, strong enough to stand up to Samantha â or at least to see past her and realize that not everyone at Swatham was the same. But no: once again it was âyou girlsâ. In minutes now, Jasmine thought, they would be back on the bus, leaving another missed opportunity behind them.
She was wrong.
7:52 PM.
There
. Benâs maroon school jacket was going to need a visit to the dry cleanerâs and he was giving off a strong whiff of vanilla, but at least heâd managed to get the worst of the goop out of his hair. He took his head out from under the hand-dryer and looked in the mirror.
He was standing, alone, in a gentsâ toilet on the Barbican foyerâs lower level â the nearest washing facilities heâd been able to find after his dripping and ignominious exit from the theatre. The yellow-shaded fluorescent strip lights buzzed overhead, flickering.
Look at this place
, Ben thought. Even the toilet walls were made of concrete â great panels of it, looming inwards,making the space seem narrow and claustrophobic. What with this and the impressions heâd had of the rest of the Barbican so far â the pulsating carpet, the empty corridors deadened into silence now the performance was underway â the whole situation was beginning to remind Ben of something. It took him a while to work out what, but when he did, he forgot about the ice cream and smiled.
Games
. The place reminded him of games: specifically, old-school first person shooters â the ones where youâre running down corridors and being attacked by monsters. That was what walking around the Barbican felt like. Benâs grin widened as he let his imagination run with the idea.
If this was a game, your classic survival horror type, the room he was standing in would have a monster in it. Something or someone would be lurking in the cubicles, would crash through the door or drop from the ceiling and try to eat his face, orâ
His grin froze. The washbasin mirror was wide: in the corner of the reflection in front of him heâd seen movement.
Ben turned. He stared. He blinked. But he saw nothing.
Idiot
, he told himself. He turned, pushed open the heavy swing door and stepped out, his thoughts going back to the gorgeous girl in the theatre.
Behind him, something moved again.
7:54 PM.
âExcuse me,â said Ms Gresham to the Barbican security man. âHello?â
The guardâs glassy stare swung and locked. âNo way out,â he said.
âYes, thank you,â said Ms Gresham, âthatâs what the man at the main entrance said too. But which way
is
the way out, please?â
The security man didnât move. He just stood there, arms folded, in front of the glass door. âNo way out,â he repeated dully.
After a couple of false starts â the way wasnât straight forward â Jasmineâs group had found a walkway down from the upper circle to the ground floor of the Barbicanâs foyer. But as they did so, Jasmine had noticed something strange. The buildingâs staff, in their orange armbands, had gathered from all areas of the complex. None of them spoke. Their radios remained on their belts. But they spread out wordlessly around the foyerâs edges. Keys were inserted. Glass-panelled doors were locked shut. For good measure, the staff then stood in front of the doors, each one assuming the same position as the security guard: arms folded, glassy eyes staring emptily.
One by one, Jasmine realized, all the exits were beingblocked. For some reason it appeared that the Barbicanâs staff wanted to keep everyone from leaving.
What was going on?
7:56 PM.
âWhat the hell . . .?â said Ben, aloud. He was standing at the bottom of the stairs on the lower level of the foyer. Heâd been on his way back to the theatre when his attention had been caught by the nearest of the massive, grey, square concrete pillars that bestrode the room