The Harlequin
Page 1
The Harlequin
Sinclair Macleod
Published in 2014 by Marplesi
Copyright © Sinclair Macleod 2014
ISBN Paperback: 978-0-9931307-0-0
ISBN eBook: 978-0-9931307-2-4
Sinclair Macleod has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this Work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Also available by Sinclair Macleod
The Reluctant Detective Series
The Reluctant Detective
The Good Girl
The Killer Performer
The Island Mystery (Short Story)
Russell and Menzies Series
Soulseeker
Inheritance
Dedication
To Morven, Isla and Emma, my wonderful nieces
with all my love.
As always, in memory of Calum,
my incredible son and constant inspiration.
Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to Emma Hamilton, Geoff Fisher and my patient editor Andy Melvin.
As always my love and thanks also go to Kim, my wife of 25 years and my incredibly wise and gorgeous daughter, Kirsten. I could not write these books without their continued love, support and inspiration.
Part One
April 1st 1993
Chapter 1
Benjamin Blake loved comic books; it was his single true passion. He would walk to the comic store in the city centre every Thursday to buy the latest issues featuring his favourite characters, just as he had done religiously every week in the seven years that had passed since his twelfth birthday.
On that Thursday, as he walked back to his house in Hyndland clutching a bag packed with his purchases, he stopped to buy some doughnuts at a local supermarket. It was another vital part of his regular routine. Benjamin liked routine.
When he reached the flat he lived in with his mother and father, he walked into the spacious living area that comprised both the lounge and an open-plan kitchen. He took out a chilled can of cola from the fridge and then pulled some sheets of kitchen towel from a roll on the wall. It was a short walk to the dining table where he settled down with his doughnut and drink, laying the sheets of towel between the snacks and the bag with the comics. He lifted each of the delicate books from the bag, taking care not to wrinkle or fold any of the pages as he laid them on the wooden surface in front of him. There was always a small thrill of anticipation as he placed them on the table, the excitement of knowing he was about to be transported out of his boring life into a world of good guys battling the villains in ever more fantastical ways. Each story would be read through once before he placed the comic in a clear polythene sleeve to preserve forever the cherished item. A folded page or single stain would render them soiled and worthless, so he was very careful to keep the doughnut and drink well away from the precious paper. He used the kitchen towel to wipe his hands after every bite of the cake, which helped to ensure the pristine condition of the comics.
Of all the superheroes that jumped from the pages to excite his imagination, Master Melter was the one that he related to the most. The red-suited superhero was a recent addition to the broad pantheon of comics. Like Benjamin he was an only child who had been bullied at school, making him Benjamin’s ideal alter ego. When Benjamin’s fictional friend was caught by a toxic explosion during a science experiment, the boy recovered to find he had the power to blind a villain with light cast from his hands, or if he was really angry, blast them away in a wave of deadly radiation. Benjamin wished he could deal in a similar way with the school bullies and all those who made his life a misery.
This week’s edition of the comic featured the blue-suited Lightning Gale doing her worst to defeat the hero. Lightning Gale was alright but she wasn’t Benjamin’s favourite villain; he preferred the scarier, more sinister criminals such as Moon Master, Death Shade and the best of all the Night Trickster. Despite his disappointment at the choice of villain for this series, Master Melter would still be the first part of his weekly reading routine.
While Benjamin was sitting at the table, the comic opened in front of him, he began to feel a strange tingle. He was finding it difficult to concentrate on the action and his head felt a little foggy. As he stared at them, the images on the page started to move; at first there were little vibrations but soon the characters limbs and lips became animated. Strange voices began to drift up from the pages like they were echoing from the end of a long tunnel. He shook his head, trying to clear the weird sights and sensations but the images continued to writhe and twist as the indistinct words became louder. Initially he was fascinated but slowly chills began to run down his spine and goosebumps appeared on his arms. When Lightning Gale began to laugh at him, the now terrified teenager began to back away from the table, his body shaking in shock.
No, no, this isn’t happening, he told himself. From somewhere deep inside him a feeling that something terrible was about to happen was beginning to overwhelm him. He felt a real palpable sense of impending danger, worse than when the bullies used to chase him home from school. He felt the need to defend himself, so he stood up and ran into the kitchen to retrieve a long, sharp knife from the block on the counter.
By the time he got back to the dining table the characters were beginning to crawl out of the pages; clambering as if they were pulling themselves up from a deep pit. Even the heroic Master Melter looked horrific as he dragged himself off the page and stood upright.
Benjamin felt he was losing control of his mind, that he was plunging rapidly into dangerous insanity but his eyes and ears were telling him that this was all too real. Then a noise from the hall startled him into a scream as the irrational panic seized him completely. He held the knife in front of him, taking up a defensive posture, determined to protect himself against whatever came through the door.
The old, heavy door that opened from the hall creaked as it swung towards him. Ominous footsteps preceded the appearance of a terrible nightmare vision; Death Shade walked into the room, his head hanging lopsidedly and luminous green eyes shining. He was followed closely by the leering, white-rimmed, rigid grin of the Night Trickster whose face was painted like a black theatrical mask. They were both laughing at Benjamin, the disparaging tone of the Trickster’s cackle and Death Shade’s breathy rasp piled rage on top of his fear.
This can’t be happening to me, he thought.
“No stay away from me,” he shouted waving the knife like a sword.
They started to edge towards him and he decided that he needed to take the initiative. Master Melter would never run away.
Death Shade was holding out his bony arms as if he was going to envelop Benjamin in a gruesome hug. The terrified young man pulled a roar from deep within him and plunged the knife into the chest of his attacker. The villain collapsed to the floor and Benjamin felt a rush of pleasure and power.
He turned his attention to the Trickster who was still leering but had begun to back away. Benjamin rushed towards the hideous creature and swung the knife in an arc that sliced through the criminal’s neck. A fountain of crimson blood arced across the room as the man went down at the hero’s feet.
***
Debbie Carlisl
e finished her lunchtime shift at the Golden Eagle pub, put on her coat and walked the short distance to her flat in Byres Road.
She was extremely tired but knew that she still had to face a few hours of studying for her second year Psychology exam. The exam was only two weeks away and she had been trying to balance the weight of the revision with pulling pints because she needed the money, but it was beginning to feel like she couldn’t do both for much longer.
Her flatmate Declan was in the shower when she walked into the square hallway of the flat. She called out to let him know she was home but he couldn’t hear her due to the water cascading and echoing in the high-ceilinged bathroom.
She dumped her bag and removed her Walkman from her pocket and laid it on the hall table. She placed her denim jacket on the coat rack and tutted as she lifted Declan’s leather coat from the floor. He is a messy pain in the arse at times, she thought.
In the galley kitchen, she made a cup of instant coffee and lifted an iced bun from a pack that was sitting on the tiny worktop.
“I’m sure he won’t mind,” she said to herself.
She felt she needed ten minutes of relaxation before she could face the enormous pile of thick textbooks again. She slumped into the ragged settee with the coffee in one hand and the bun in the other.
She sat for a short time, feeling a release of some of the stress but suddenly she felt the room begin to chill and darken. She looked at the window but it still seemed to be bright outside; the darkness was closing in from the walls of the flat, not because of anything that was happening in the street. She jumped up, as a disconcerting feeling of alarm descended upon her like a menacing veil. The temperature continued to drop and she began to shake. She sniffed the air, the smell of ozone and brine filled her nostrils as clearly as if she was standing on the seashore.
She was about to run out of the room when a figure stepped into the doorway. He was massive, covered in tattoos and dripping wet. She backed away, unable to believe that Max Cady was standing in front of her. She and Declan had watched the video of Cape Fear two nights previously and now here was the killer standing in her living room.
“Get out!” she screamed at the cruel, savage sneering face.
Cady started to talk but she couldn’t understand a word he was saying, it was like he was speaking in tongues. He moved around her with his arms out wide, as if he was showing off his tattoos; the images of death, a broken heart and lightning bolts that were inked darkly into his skin. The shadow concentrated itself around him like a ghastly, semi-transparent cloak.
He’s going to kill me, he’s going to kill me, was the only thought that kept screaming around her head. He continued to speak incomprehensible gibberish but she was convinced from the tone that he was threatening her.
He had moved around her so that his back was to the window. In a fit of uncontrollable panic she decided to rush the killer and try to get him off balance before he could act. She charged at him like a rugby player. Cady was too surprised to act and despite Debbie’s diminutive stature she managed to propel him backwards. As he stumbled, his heel caught on the rug and the two fell into the enormous bay window. The glass splintered and shattered into hundreds of pieces; all resistance gone, the two people fell four floors to their death.
***
John Morrison was sick of university. He was sick of the work, he was sick of the staff but most of all he was sick of the students. They were pretentious little bastards who thought they knew everything and that they were destined to rule the world. Most of them didn’t even know he existed; they would pass him in the corridor without even an acknowledgement, not a word nor even a nod. However, if he didn’t do his job properly then they would notice. They’d complain about untidy classrooms and filthy toilets; they’d moan about the amount of rubbish that mounted up after they had cast it aside; they’d notice that their shite smelled just as bad as everybody else.
With his mop he pushed his bucket-on-wheels into a chemistry class on the top floor of the building. He looked at the floor and thought that it didn’t look too bad; it would be fine after a quick flick through with the mop. On the lecturer’s table were a few cake boxes marked with the logo of the local supermarket.
“How can they no’ put this stuff intae the bin?” he grumbled to himself. He began to flatten the boxes but when he got to the last one he spotted that there was a solitary éclair to tempt him.
“Bonus,” he said as he lifted the chocolate covered confection to his lips. It was sweet and delicious, and immediately lifted his mood. When it was finished he placed all the cake boxes into a bin bag that he dropped outside the door of the room to be collected later that evening.
Feeling a lot happier, he began to whistle The Bluebells song ‘Young At Heart’ as he swished the broad mop around the desks. He didn’t like much of the modern music he heard - he was more an Eagles man - but he had to admit that he thought it was a good tune.
As he was getting close to finishing the room he noticed a drop in temperature. He checked the windows, they were all firmly closed but it was definitely getting colder. His head began to pound and he thought that he might be coming down with something.
As he turned away from the window, at the edge of his vision he sensed movement. He spun all the way round to see blood seeping from the walls; little drops coalescing and running down in narrow rivulets that grew thicker as they flowed together. At the junction of the walls and the ceiling, shapes began to push through as if the wall was made of latex. Grotesque demonic faces emerged, pushing through the skin like an alien birth. Twisted and mutated bodies followed rapidly.
He dropped the mop and began to move backwards, the classroom door was his only thought as the multi-limbed visions of hell began to crawl down towards the floor. He crossed himself and began to recite the Lord’s Prayer.
The mutilated monsters began to edge in his direction, their movement made awkward by the distorted forms they took. No two were alike; some looked like they were the result of some mad experiment to combine humans with animals; they had any number of combinations of hooves or paws or talons or horns. Others had small heads with sharp fangs bared in a morbidly malformed grin. Yet others had long curved claws where their hands should be.
He felt the door at his back and he turned to open it, scared that they would attack him he stepped quickly out into the hall. The sight that greeted him was even worse than the one he had escaped, as pools of blood, vomit and bile oozed across the floor making it extremely slippery. He turned towards the lift but there were many more of the terrors lurching up the corridor in his direction. His only escape was the door to the roof about twenty metres away. As he tried to gain purchase to run from the creatures, his feet slipped in the liquid and he fell into a puddle of yellow bile. He could feel it stinging his eyes as he scrambled to his feet. As he fumbled with the keys he could hear the demons edging ever closer. Their chattering and moans made it difficult for him to concentrate on choosing the correct key from the huge collection he had on his belt.
Finally, he opened the door, closed it and locked it behind him. He ran up the short stairs to the flat roof, his breathing ragged as his heart pounded. He thought that he was safe until he turned to see the monsters emerging through the door as if it wasn’t there. They kept coming at him as he moved closer to the edge. They all appeared to know that he was trapped, their mangled and monstrous faces contorted in insane grins of anticipatory pleasure.
When they raised their limbs all he could see was a forest of talons, skeletal hands and vicious blades. Seeing no alternative, he ran to the edge and jumped.
Chapter 2
Police Constable Alan Henderson led his younger colleague P.C. Robbie McNish up three flights of stairs to the flat in Hyndland. They had received a call from a neighbour concerning a domestic disturbance at the Blake family home.
“Probably some drunk slapping his wife around,�
�� Henderson had suggested when the call had come in.
At the third-floor landing, Henderson said, “Sounds all quiet at the moment.” He lifted his hand and thumped a fist against the door. “Police, open up.” There was no response so he placed his ear to the door but he couldn’t hear any movement in the flat.
From the house on the opposite side of the close an elderly woman appeared.
“We’re looking for the Blakes,” Henderson said.
“I know. I’m the one who called you,” she replied with a soft Irish accent.
“And you are?’
“Mrs Patricia O’Doyle. Most people call me Pat.”
“Can you tell us what happened?”
“Oh dear, it was awful. Young Benjamin was screaming and shouting like he was really scared for his life. It lasted about ten minutes and then it stopped just after I called the police.”
“Who is Benjamin?”
“He’s Agnes and Abraham’s son.”
“What age is he?”
“About nineteen I think.”
“Are there any other children?”
“No, it’s only Benjamin.”
Henderson turned back to the Blake home and shouted but this time in a more friendly tone, “Benjamin, is everything OK? It’s the police, we’re here to help.”
There was still no indication that there was anyone in the flat. Henderson was about to charge the door when McNish turned the door handle and it swung open. The two constables walked into the house, Henderson calling out, telling whoever might be inside that they were coming and not to be alarmed.
When they reached the living room, the scene that greeted them resembled an abattoir. There was darkening red blood everywhere; it was congealing on each of the walls, dripping from the ceiling and splashes covered every piece of furniture. The majority of it was collected in a huge puddle surrounding the three bodies that lay in a morbid triangle of death.