Authors: David Peace
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural
I was introduced to Bob Douglas at a local charity event organised for my sons school. Mr Douglass daughter attends the same school and my wife and his wife are both on the PTA.
And which school would this be?
St Bernards in Burnage.
Catholic?
My wife is.
OK. So
So Ive known of Bob Douglas for a while and spoken to him on a number of occasions at school functions. My wife said he was a former police officer and I remember being vaguely aware that he had been involved in catching that Michael Myshkin and then hed had to retire after being shot during some kind of robbery in Wakefield. Anyway, couple of months back there was a spate of burglaries in the Didsbury area and I decided it was as good a time as any to tighten up the security at home. I called Bob Douglas and he came out and did a very thorough but reasonably priced job for us. During the course of this we got on very well and since then hes done other bits of work for me.
Like?
Still nodding, Richard Dawson says: Security at the office, insurance estimates.
Do you pay him a wage, Mr Dawson?
A retainer, plus a fee for specific work.
When did you last see or speak to him?
To be honest, I cant remember when I last saw him without looking at my diary. I have spoken to him though. Last Friday night he called to tell me hed heard I was under investigation, he says, waving a hand at the assembled company.
And youve had no contact with Mr Douglas since then?
None.
A knock at the door.
Ronnie Allen comes in and hands a slip of paper to Roger Hook
Hook glances at it and hands it to Smith
Smith pulls his chair back from the table and reads the note
He turns to Ronnie Allen: Get everyone together. Eleventh floor, thirty minutes.
Allen nods and leaves, careful to avoid my gaze.
Smith reads the paper again, then folds it up and puts it in his pocket
He looks at Richard Dawson
Mr Dawson, says Clement Smith, sitting forward in his chair. Im sorry to have to tell you that a security guard found Bob Douglas and his daughter murdered in a warehouse in Ashburys early this morning.
Richard Dawson pales, swallows, shaking his head from side to side
Looking into my face, searching
Desperately lost, pleading
Mouth opening and closing, choking
Mr Dawson? says Smith.
Richard Dawson, blank
Smith: Do you have anything to say?
Silence, a long dark silence
Then Dawson whispers: Nothing, but Id like to see my lawyer now.
Fine, says Smith and stands up. Chief Inspector Hook will make the necessary arrangements and set up a time.
Hook nods and says into the tape recorder: Interview suspended at three thirty-five p.m. December 17 1980.
He presses stop, eject, and takes out the tape and writes on the cassette:
Dawson int/1/171280
.
Richard Dawson is still looking at me
We all stand up, all except Dawson.
Im following Smith and Hook out when
Pete, says Richard Dawson.
I turn around
Thanks for being a friend, he spits.
What?
You heard.
Catch-up:
Hook looking at me, Smith holding out the piece of paper
I take it, read:
Prints on cassette, Jack Whitehead
.
Hook staring, Smith waiting
I say: Jesus.
Hook nodding, Smith waiting
I say: Someone called Stanley Royd?
Hook nodding: Never left his bed.
Me: Fuck.
Smith: First thing tomorrow. The pair of you.
The room upstairs
Twelve black suits and twelve blank faces.
What are we going to tell the press? asks someone.
Nothing, says Smith.
I stand up
Where are you going? says someone.
Ashburys.
Now?
Weve missed something. I know we have.
Twelve dark suits and twelve darker faces
Their patience gone, my time up:
Exit.
On the way back to Ashburys, a prayer:
O Blessed Lord, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comforts;
I beseech thee, look down in pity and compassion upon this thy afflicted servant
.
Thou writest bitter things against me, and makest me to possess my former iniquities;
Thy wrath lieth hard upon me, and my soul is full of trouble:
But, o merciful God, who hast written thy holy Word for our learning, that we, through patience and comfort of thy holy Scriptures, might have hope;
Give me a right understanding of myself, and of thy threats and promises;
That I may neither cast away my confidence in thee, nor place it anywhere but in thee
.
Give me strength against all my temptations and heal all my distempers
.
Break not the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax
.
Shut not up thy tender mercies in displeasure;
But make me to hear of joy and gladness, that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice
.
Deliver me from fear of the enemy, and lift up the light of thy countenance upon me, and give me peace, through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ our Lord
.
Amen
.
A prayer, on the way back to Ashburys.
Ashburys, cursed and godless:
Wednesday 17 December 1980
Five oclock.
Seven days before Christmas
In hell.
I get out of the car and walk towards the factory
Sun gone, only night and looming buildings dark and towering with their dead eyes, their empty rooms
Pitch-black and deathlike, silent but for the screams of passing freight
The ring of wraiths around a yellow drum of fire, breaking to let me pass
In the bleak midwinter, make a friend of death
At the door, the tape in my head:
HISS
Piano
Drums
Bass
How can this be love, if it makes us cry?
STOP
.
HISS
Cries
Whispers
Hell:
How can the world he as sad as it seems?
STOP
.
HISS
Cries
Whispers
More hell:
How much do you love me?
STOP
.
HISS
Cries
Cries
Cries:
Sti rip sll iwl lik Hunter!
STOP
.
At the door, thinking of the prints on the tape:
Jack Whitehead
.
At the door, the note in her mouth:
5 LUV
.
At the door, messages
Messages
Messages and signs
Messages, signs and symbols
Of death.
Everywhere the distractions, everywhere but here
Here, symbols
Here, signs
Here messages:
In the bleak midwinter, make a friend of death
Here death
Only death
No distractions
Only messages
Messages
Messages and signs
Messages, signs and symbols
Of death
Only death, a friend:
In the bleak midwinter, make a friend of death
I step inside
Inside:
Silence, deathlike.
Heavy workbenches, oil and chains, tools; the stink of machines, oil and chains, tools; the sound of dirty water, oil and chains, tools; dripping, dripping, dripping, dripping, tools:
Jack Whitehead
.
High skylights, night and rain against the pane
The workbench bare, the body gone:
Bob Douglas
.
I walk across the wet and bloody concrete floor, walk to the door and with my boot I push it open
Push and see a muddy bath affixed to the wall, its head towards the night from the skylight, bare:
Karen Douglas
.
Head bowed, I stand before the empty bath
Silence, deathlike:
Missed something
Know we have
Know
I walk down the side of the garage to the shed at the back.
I take the key from my pocket and unlock the door.
I am cold, freezing.
I go inside, lock the door behind me and put on the light.
My room
The War Room
.
I sit down at the desk and stare at the wall above
Anabasis:
One map, thirteen photographs
Each photograph a face, each face a letter and a date, a number on each forehead.
I turn from one of the grey metal filing cabinets to the other
From the one marked
Ripper
To the one marked
Yorkshire
.
I lean over to the grey metal filing cabinet marked
Yorkshire
and I take out a file one from the front:
Douglas, Robert
To an old newspaper dated:
Tuesday 24 December 1974
To the Front Page and the headline:
3
Dead in Wakefield Xmas Shoot-out
To the sub-heading:
Hero Cops Foil Pub Robbery
.
Then I lean over to the grey metal filing cabinet marked
Yorkshire
and again I take out a file one from the back:
Whitehead, Jack
To an old newspaper dated:
Monday 27 January 1975
To the Front Page and the headline:
Man Kills Wife in Exorcism
To the sub-heading:
Local Priest Arrested
.
Finally I open up a thick blank notebook.
Inside, I write one word in big black felt tip pen:
Exegesis
Then I switch on the cassette and I begin:
And when we die
And float away
Into the night
The Milky Way
Youll hear me call
As we ascend
Ill say your name
Then once again
Thank you for being a friend
.
I push open the bedroom door.
Joan is in bed, pretending to be asleep.
I go over to her and I kiss her forehead.
She opens her eyes: Whereve you been?
The shed, I say.
All this time? Its almost dawn.
Yes, I say. Its almost dawn.
She closes her eyes again.
I undress and put on my pyjamas.
I switch off the light and get in beside her.
I love you, she says, snuggling up to me, closer
Me too, I say, holding her in the cold bed and staring up at the ceiling, the smell of her hair, listening to the cars on the road and the rise and fall of her breathing.
They were here again, back
People on the TV singing hymns with no face
People on the TV singing hymns with no face, no features
And at my feet, they had her down on the floor at my feet, her hands behind her back, stripped and beaten, three of them raping her, sodomising her, taking their turns with a bottle and a chair, cutting her hair, pissing and shitting on her, making her suck them, making her suck me, ugly gulls circling overhead, screaming
Helen Marshall sucking me, Helen Marshall screaming:
Sti rip sll iwl lik Hunter!
Awake, sweating and afraid, staring up at the ceiling, no cars on the roads
Afraid again
No more sleep, no more sleep, no more sleep
Out of the grey morning, Joan reaching for me: Whats wrong, love? What is it?
Heart racing, beating, breaking
I can feel come in my pyjamas again. Nothing, I say, thinking
Nothing
Part 2
Nothing short of a total war
wearing tights and two pairs of panties one pair of panties removed my right leg out left leg in again the news from nowhere this from bradford Saturday the fourth of june nineteen seventy seven linda dark in a green jacket and a long black velvet dress in the shadow of the sikh temple on bowling back lane fresh from the mecca now tiffanys then the bali hai discotheque drunk and dancing he leads me into mystery where sighs cries and shrieks of lamentation echo throughout the starless summer air angry cadences shrill outcries the raucous groans and chants of a football crowd joined with the sounds of their hands him raising a whirling storm that turns itself forever through the starless summer air the day fading and the darkening air releasing all the creatures of the earth from their daily tasks drunk and dancing my plan was to walk until e saw a taxi rather than wait at the rank with the rest of them and as e was walking up pulled a white or yellow ford cortina mark two with a black satan look roof which stopped on the wakefield road the door opens and he leans across and offers me a lift and in e get the man is thirty five years old and maybe just six feet and of a large build with light brown shoulder length hair thick eyebrows puffy cheeks a big nose and big hands here this is the way but e am drunk from dancing and e keep nodding off and we are bumping up and down across some wasteland and e know what he wants but e am too drunk from dancing to care and e hate my husband who is a spoilsport does not like my drinking and dancing not that he has ever bothered to watch me dance and e ask the driver if he fancies me and he says he does so e tell him to drive to wasteland over yonder behind where pakis go nodding off bumping up and down across some wasteland e know what she wants and she says stop here because e have to have a pee and she gets out and is squatting down in the dark the sound of her urine on the wasteland under the starless endless black summer air of this here hell e hit her with the hammer and e rip her black velvet dress to the waist and e stab her repeatedly in the chest in the stomach and in the back but then e see lights going on in gypsy caravan an alsatian dog barking and e think she is dead so e drive away at high speed bumping up and down across wasteland and it is morning and e am not drinking or dancing e am cold freezing cold and crying people coming and looking at me lying on the wasteland my girdle pants and tights pulled down a blow to the back of the head stabbed four times in my chest in my stomach and in my back one a slashing stab wound that stretches from my breasts to below my belly button the surgeons they give me one of them life saving operations and e do not die e cannot die so e live with a hole in my head and scars across my belly where the sighs cries and shrieks of lamentation echo throughout the starless endless black night of this here hell wherein there is no hope of death alone in this starless endless night alone and banished from the disco mountain to never hear the songs that made me dance where he showed me the way where he won again no hope of death alone in this starless night alone among the junk and the rubbish where the dogs the ponies the cats the little gypsy children play with the old fridges and cookers the bicycles and prams and was it not here that one of them gypsy kids they hid in an old fridge and nobody found her and did she not die alone in that old fridge nobody looking for her among the broken sinks and meters the bits and pieces from the old council houses that have all been boarded up while them gypsy folk live in their caravans with their horses their dogs and drink in the farmyard while their