Barbicanâs concert hall, cinemas, and the rest of it. But there was nowhere for the crowd to go. Moments ago there had been silence and emptiness; now there were people everywhere, and they were getting anxious. Individual voices merged into the swelling crush as the crowd took on a life of its own, becoming something less than human. The noise was getting louder and the room was getting hotter.
Ben looked up at the ceiling.
8:03 PM.
Jasmine hated crowds. It was partly her height: for her, being in a crowd usually meant getting a faceful of some strangerâs armpit. But worse even than that was the loss of control, the helplessness. Jasmine hated feeling powerless, hated it more than anything, but she felt it now: her arms were pressed to her sides; the room was so tightly packed that moving at all was an effort. As the people around her surged and shoved allshe could do was sway with the rest and try to keep her feet.
âItâs all right, girls,â said Ms Gresham from beside her. âItâs all going to be all right.â
Jasmine looked at her teacher. If this was Ms Greshamâs best effort to reassure them, it wasnât working. In fact it just made things worse: something was wrong here, badly wrong, Jasmine knew it. She stood on tiptoe, craned her neck and looked over at the Barbicanâs main entrance. Six angry people in Shakespearean costume â actors from the play â were arguing with glassy-eyed Barbican staff there and meeting with just as little response as Ms Gresham had.
âSomeone must have known about the alarm,â said Jasmine, thinking aloud. âWhy did they lock the doors? Why wonât they let us out?â
âWeâre trapped here,â said Samantha.
âWhatâre you talking about, trapped here?â asked Lauren, her voice rising. âWhy would we be trapped here?â
âCalm down, Lauren,â said Ms Gresham. âAnd Samantha, Iâd appreciate it if youâd keep observations like that to yourself. This will all be over in a moment, Iâm sure.â
Still on tiptoe, Jasmine craned her head round as best she could, looking for clues about what was going on.
There! She saw a flash of movement out of the corner of her eye: something had dropped from above to land in the crowd.
The hubbub was pierced by a scream.
Jasmineâs eye was caught by another falling object, closer this time, over to her left. Now more were falling, and more, until the objects were dropping all over the room.
More screams. Jasmine felt the crowd crush in around her, flinching as one.
âWhatâs happening?â a woman next to her was saying, her voice high and shrill. âWhat are they trying to get away from?
Why wonât anyone tell me whatâsâ?
â
Then, unbelievably, the whole ceiling seemed to fall in.
Ben ducked, instinctively throwing his arms up over his head. But the impact when it came wasnât like a ceiling collapse; it was more like . . . what? The touch on his head was light, scrabbling, ticklish. Shuddering, Ben batted it away hard without thinking. He straightened up, opened his eyes, and saw pandemonium.
All over the foyer people seemed to have gone into some sort of dancing frenzy â twisting, slapping at themselves, waving their arms about. â
Get it off me!
â roared Mr Clissold, crashing into him and almost knocking him over. â
Get it off! AAAAAGH!
â
Benâs eyes went wide.
One of the crawling creatures heâd seen earlier was on Mr Clissoldâs back. Quickly but very deliberately it made its wayup the centre of his spine, out of reach of his slapping hands. Now it was between his shoulder blades. It waited there a moment, reared up on its rubbery legs and then, before Ben could do anything more than gape, it clamped itself to the back of Mr Clissoldâs neck.
Mr Clissold went rigid. His eyes rolled back. Then he fell to the ground.
Ben stared at