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Dismemberment
Dismemberment
Dismemberment
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Dismemberment

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Annie and Laurence Trent are a young, professional couple living in a London suburb. Laurence is beset with worry: about money, about his job, about the economy and the future. He and Annie long to start a family but can’t afford to.

It is 18 December, 2009. Just before midnight, she urgently turns and wakes him. There are sounds of intrusion downstairs.

Laurence arms himself with the hammer they keep by the bed and ventures out to the landing.

He waits and listens at the rail; and with a surge of relief decides the thief or thieves have taken what they wanted and gone.

Then he realizes someone is still below: still below, and heading for the stairs.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 2015
ISBN9781311956286
Dismemberment
Author

Richard Herley

I was born in England in 1950 and educated at Watford Boys' Grammar School and Sussex University, where my interest in natural history led me to read biology.My first successful novel was "The Stone Arrow", which was published to critical acclaim in 1978. It subsequently won the Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize, administered by the Royal Society of Literature in London, and was the first in a trilogy. This was followed by "The Penal Colony" (1987), a futuristic thriller that formed the basis of the 1994 movie "No Escape", starring Ray Liotta.The main difficulty for the author is making his voice heard in the roar of self-promotion. I believe that the work I am producing now is of higher quality than my prize-winning first, and ask you, the reader, to help spread the word by telling your friends if you have enjoyed one of my books.

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    Dismemberment - Richard Herley

    DISMEMBERMENT

    Richard Herley

    Copyright Richard Herley 2015

    The Author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

    Smashwords Edition

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    ——————————

    I am most grateful to the following people, who read the work in draft form and made helpful suggestions: Jeremy Barnes, Charles Culbertson, Mike Julien, Lesley Potts.

    RH

    ——————————

    Table of contents

    1 Noises downstairs

    2 The police

    3 The station car-park

    4 Mr Jarrett

    5 Argos

    6 Junk mail

    7 The doorbell

    8 Insomnia

    9 The hacksaw

    10 The freezer

    11 Annie becomes detached

    12 Mrs Sayeed

    13 Blaming Annie

    14 The DIY store

    15 The Burger Maestro

    16 Wing mirrors

    17 The work of highest heaven

    18 Three women

    19 Going next door

    20 Trogs

    21 A rising main

    22 Christmas Eve

    23 Felicity

    24 Marjorie the detective

    25 Noar Hill

    26 Mr Sayeed

    27 Annie calls Marjorie

    28 Crowe

    29 Slow drains

    30 Clearing the blockage

    31 Annie sets things straight

    32 DCI Benson

    33 The Second Symphony

    Other novels by Richard Herley

    ________________________________

    Every decent man in this age is, and must be, a coward and a slave.

    — Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from Underground

    ________________________________

    1

    11.48 p.m., 17 December, 2009

    ‘Laurence. Laurence.’

    He was not yet fully asleep.

    ‘What is it?’

    With the same urgency, she whispered, ‘There’s someone downstairs.’

    ‘What?’

    ‘I heard a noise.’

    His wife had become obsessed by her fear of burglars. That was why he had installed the alarm. If an intruder so much as tried to open a door or window or fiddle with the wiring, the bell would start and the light flash and an automatic message would go to the police. Since the bell wasn’t ringing, no one could be downstairs.

    The alarm was so sensitive that it sometimes went off for no reason. Annie distrusted it. For all the reassurance it had given her, Laurence might as well have followed his inclination and had a dummy box fixed to the wall.

    Because she could put no faith in the alarm, Annie still, every so often, thought she heard burglars. To placate her, he always went to look. But tonight he was very tired. Even so, he would have to make the effort. This evening, for the first time in weeks, they had quarrelled. He had sulked for two hours before accepting the need to apologise.

    He raised himself on his left elbow and turned to peer at the display on the clock-radio. ‘It’s not even midnight,’ he said. ‘I don’t think —’

    Then he heard something himself.

    Annie’s grip on his forearm tightened.

    Rising from the living room, deadened by intervening plaster and timber and carpet, an alien noise had just reached his ears.

    It was followed by another, of slightly different character.

    In trying to ascribe the noises to something other than their obvious cause, his mind could produce only a sparse list of alternatives: the central heating, an electrical fault, even a foraging mouse knocking an object from a shelf. Examining and being forced to discard each of these in turn, Laurence became aware that his heart was already pounding with the certainty of what was happening downstairs.

    His first impulse was to lock the bedroom door, but the key no longer turned. Indeed, the key itself had disappeared. It was probably somewhere in the chipped vase of odds and ends he kept on a shelf in the built-in wardrobe. It might be possible to barricade the door, to drag the bed in front of it and heap stuff on top. But then whoever was downstairs would hear. In hearing, he would become bolder, and inclined, perhaps, in parting and in spite, to set fire to the house; or else he would want to get in and punish them. Earlier in the year, just a few streets away, a masked intruder had found a young woman living alone with her small daughter. They had been subjected to an ordeal so protracted and depraved that even the national press had reported it.

    If it would be dangerous to barricade the door, it would be even more dangerous to do nothing and lie here in the hope that the thief would just take what he wanted and leave. And suppose there were more than one. Suppose there were two, or even three. What might they do to Annie, to him?

    Laurence thought of the bedside telephone. Using it would cause the LED to turn green on the base unit in the living room. The man would see, pick up, listen. Laurence’s only advantage would be thrown away. As for his mobile, that was in the study. He said, ‘Where’s your phone?’

    ‘Downstairs. Why not use this one?’

    ‘He’d see the light.’

    And even if they were able to call the police, how long would it be before they showed up? Judging by recent trends, they might prove just as reliable as the alarm system.

    ‘What are we going to do?’

    He didn’t know.

    Another noise came up from the living room. There could be no doubt. They were being burgled. Burgled while in occupation, while lying in bed; burgled by a criminal who was so brazen that he didn’t care whether they heard him. He knew they dared not intervene. They, like the rest of the society on which he preyed, were too cowardly to resist. So cowardly, in fact, that if he felt like it he would come up to their bedroom and to his evening’s profit add sexual gratification and the realisation of his most perverted fantasies.

    Then Laurence remembered the hammer. How could he have forgotten it? The hammer. A sixteen ounce claw-hammer in hardened and tempered chrome vanadium steel, fitted with a dark-blue rubber grip perforated for sweat drainage and better adhesion. He had used it only a few times recently, mainly for hanging pictures when they had first moved in. At Annie’s insistence he had taken it from his toolbox and left it, helve pointing upwards, next to the skirting board under his bedside table. He had thought her paranoia absurd; now he felt a flood of love and gratitude for her foresight and good sense.

    ‘Let’s call the police.’

    ‘No,’ he said. ‘The phone light, downstairs. We can’t risk it.’

    Laurence must have already made a start, without knowing it, on climbing out of bed, for she now clutched his arm even more tightly and whispered, ‘Laurence, don’t.’

    ‘I’m taking the hammer. It’s probably just a kid. Maybe a junkie after Christmas presents. I’ll scare him off.’

    She urged him again to call the police.

    ‘Wait five minutes. Or until I shout. I’ll shout ‟police". All right?’

    ‘Don’t go. Please.’

    ‘I’ll have the hammer. If he tries anything he’ll come off second best.’

    ‘Suppose he’s got a gun.’

    ‘Believe me, he hasn’t. This is London, not Los Angeles.’

    Laurence’s feet touched the carpet. Having put on his glasses, he groped for the hammer. His right hand moulded itself to the shape of the grip and the underlying steel of the shaft. As he slowly raised his arm, exaggeratedly avoiding the bedside table for fear of touching it and making a noise, the weight seemed satisfyingly, comfortingly right: neither so little that the weapon would be ineffective, nor so great that it would slow his swing or impair his aim.

    ‘Please, Laurence.’

    ‘Don’t try to use the phone till I say. Promise?’

    ‘I promise.’

    As he rose from the edge of the mattress he felt her hand momentarily touching his naked back. ‘Be careful.’

    He could not help but compare the present Annie with the Annies of all those false alarms.

    The sodium lamp across the street was near enough, and the curtains were flimsy enough, to provide dim illumination of the room at night. Laurence pushed his toes into his slippers. He took his dressing gown from its hook behind the door and put it on. Parking the hammer in his armpit, he tied the cord at the waist. He took a final glance back towards the bed and Annie’s anxious form and realised he was being brave. He was showing courage. Physical courage, something he had never thought he possessed.

    His glance back, like his grasp on the unresisting lever of the door handle, like the cool December air entering and leaving his mouth and nostrils, like the impersonal drone of the traffic on the distant North Circular Road: his glance back seemed both ominous and inevitable, as if whatever was about to happen had been written in the stars. For all that, his heart was now thumping so hard that he was afraid his hearing would be impaired just when he needed it most.

    With agonising stealth he opened the door and, pulling it almost shut behind him, flitted across the short expanse of carpeted landing to the banister rail. He placed his hand on the knob and leaned over, waiting for more sounds from the living room.

    From here, part of the hallway could be seen. Panels of orange sodium-light were being admitted by the glazing in the front door, augmented by a more subtle, pervasive glow, drawn from above, the aura that each night bathed the whole metropolis and its mile after mile of suburbs.

    The authorities paid for the electricity. Laurence had no say in the design or placing of the lamp-posts, including the one opposite, outside Number 21, which polluted the air throughout all hours of darkness and deprived him and Annie of any chance whatever to gaze up, from their modest and grotesquely overpriced property, and admire the heavens. Somehow, tonight, that official, unflinching filament was rendering the staircase less familiar. It was as if they no longer owned it, as if they had never owned it, as if it were biding its time till their tenure ended.

    The descending banister was casting a complex geometry of shadows across the staircarpet and part way up the wall. He might be acting bravely, but still he was close to panic. His eye ranged down the treads and risers. He craned his head.

    A moment later he understood that the continuing silence from below meant the man or men must already have left. In a few minutes, when Laurence felt it safe to venture downstairs, he would find the French window wide open. The screen and the player, the hi-fi, his laptop, whatever else had been stolen, would have gone out that way, across the patio and along the side of the house to the street; or it might all have been passed over the fence to an accomplice. Laurence would call the police. They would make a few enquiries, dust without enthusiasm for fingerprints, and finally issue a crime number so he could claim on the insurance. Later, he and Annie would spend what remained of the night in a hotel. Anywhere but here.

    ‘Thank God,’ he thought. ‘Thank God for that.’

    His heartbeat had begun to slow. It was all right. Even if they had to move house, it was all right. The insurance would replace whatever they had lost. Or they could live without it, sentimental value or no. There was never anything on TV and the movies were pernicious rubbish. As for the laptop, that belonged to his employer. His own machine, a desktop, was here, upstairs. Nothing they owned had any intrinsic value, not even his hi-fi. No property was ever worth defending. Nothing mattered, as long as Annie and he were left unharmed.

    He thought of her then, sitting up in bed. He decided to go back and reassure her. His hand let go of the banister-knob. He had even begun to turn away, towards their bedroom, when below, directly below, coming from the doorway of the kitchen, he glimpsed the advancing beam of a flashlight.

    * * *

    Something about the torch-beam, the relaxed, indifferent way it was exploring the hall, expressed the contempt its wielder felt for this house and its occupants. The people living here observed the rules. Worked hard. Paid their taxes and their mortgage. Saved up for the things they wanted or bought them on credit. When the government changed the rules and made the game harder, as it did all the time, these idiots would conform. They would compromise themselves yet further to fend off trouble. They had no idea that the only freedom these days lay outside the law.

    Just a few motions of the torch-beam managed to convey all this to Laurence’s mind. Or perhaps the hand wielding the torch had conveyed nothing but its own approach, and the rest had been supplied by his imagination – for he was now functioning in a new and extraordinary way. He had until this moment never suspected the nature of his own true centre: receptive, limpid, working to a slower and more ancient measure. His eyesight had become fully adapted to the orange glow. He watched the torch and dark-gloved hand being followed into view by the intruder’s dark-sleeved forearm, his dark shoulders and dark-hatted head. In placing his free hand on the downstairs knob, he became Laurence’s exact counterpart.

    He was coming up.

    Laurence shrank back from the rail and into the doorway of the small bedroom he and Annie used as a study. It opened on the landing at the top of the staircase. The study lay in near-darkness: the curtains had been drawn.

    Though he could barely breathe, he could already smell stale sweat and damp rainwear. The odour grew stronger. At the familiar sound of the creak on the loose tread, he shrank back even further. The beam of light strayed across the door-jamb and passed on.

    The newcomer was bulky and tall. He reached the top of the stairs. His torch began to probe the vacancy of the study: and Laurence lost all grip on reason.

    He moved fluently forward and to the left so that his arm was given its freest, most powerful swing. For an instant of dazzle the torch-beam was in his eyes, but he knew just where to strike and the man had no time to react.

    The ferocious momentum of the swing, concentrated in the small, circular, hardened face of the hammerhead, drove the steel cylinder into the black woollen hat just above the forehead. Scraps of yarn were carried through and added to a few fine strands of hair, and on through the thin, greasy skin of the scalp. As yet only sparsely bloodied, the mixture of fibres pioneered a way through the splintering bone of the cranium, through the membranes surrounding the brain, and were then plunged into the folds of the frontal lobe. The momentum was only checked when the helve struck a lower part of the skull. The forward part of the hammerhead, sunken, jammed, dragged the rubber grip from Laurence’s hand as the man uttered a baffled grunt and fell backwards and sideways to the floor. His torch bounced once and lay still, its beam happening to illuminate the features, dragged and distorted by the carpet, of his face.

    His hand twitched once. He made a repulsive noise and lay still. Drool began to issue from the corner of his mouth.

    Laurence’s vision was being haunted by two dwindling, motile squiggles, the afterimages of the torch-bulb filament. Through them he stared at what he had done. He did not know for how long. His trance was interrupted by the realisation that no one else was coming up. The man had been working alone.

    ‘Annie!’

    The door swung back and he said, at normal volume now, ‘Put the light on.’

    2

    Half an hour later they had absorbed the fact that Laurence had killed someone – absorbed it intellectually, if not emotionally. Annie had become oddly calm. He was consumed with disgust and guilt and dread: dread of his suddenly altered future and, even more pressing, the gigantic, overarching worry about how he was going to deal with this.

    The burglar was white, about fifty years of age. From what could be seen of his gingery hair, he was – had been – going bald. ‘You did well to down him,’ Laurence had told himself, at some darker and more confused point in the welter of his thoughts, and now the shameful phrase kept returning to him, with each repetition becoming yet more imbued with guilt and reproach.

    Nor could he rid his memory of the physical sensations when the hammer had entered and stuck in the man’s brain: the inadequate brain that, earlier this evening, had deemed it a good idea to break into a semi-detached house in this cul-de-sac in Enham Hill. Why had he chosen this one? What if he had broken into the left-hand house in the pair, the home of Marjorie and Graham?

    Marjorie – Councillor Mrs Sudeley, the staunch busybody who sat on the Police Authority – had, almost from the moment when Annie had appeared on the landing, loomed nearly as large in Laurence’s worries as the burglar himself. Her fleshy solidity, her righteousness, her suffocating certitude and her condescension towards the ‘young couple’ next door: these had become mingled with the special revulsion aroused in Laurence by the burglar’s thick-soled trainers, his cocoa-brown socks and the inordinate largeness of his feet. Marjorie was only a few yards away, horizontal no doubt, sound asleep with luck, perhaps in a double bed, beside the lumpish and obedient form of her husband.

    Laurence and Annie had left the burglar where he had fallen. She had had the impressive presence of mind to run down to the kitchen and fetch a bin-liner. Laurence had lifted the head, hammer and all, by the ears, while Annie had slipped the black plastic over it. She had once read that the human brain was richly supplied with blood. The hammerhead might act as a plug, keeping much of it in until coagulation sealed up the rest of the hole. Even so, there was every chance that the wound would leak, perhaps exuding other fluids too. The mouth of the bag she had bunched up and left in a twist.

    The carpet was nearly new. It covered the staircase as well as the landing and would cost a lot to replace. As yet unspoken was the idea that

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