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In a word: Incline

When you first think of this word, it is with a slippery slope in mind.

I’ve been on a few of those in my time.

And while we’re on the subject, those inclines measured in degrees are very important if you want a train to get up and down the side of a mountain.

For the train, that’s an incline plane, the point where traction alone won’t get the iron horse up the hill.

Did I say ‘Iron Horse’?  Sorry, regressed there, back to the mid-1800s in the American West for a moment.

It’s not that important when it comes to trucks and cars, and less so if you like four-wheel driving; getting up near-vertical mountainsides often present a welcome challenge to the true enthusiast

But for the rest of us, not so much if you find yourself sliding in reverse uncontrollably into the bay.  I’m sure it’s happened more than once.

Then…

Are you inclined to go?

A very different sort of incline, ie to be disposed towards an attitude or desire.

An inclination, maybe, not to go four-wheel driving?

There is another, probably more obscure use of the word incline, and that relates to an elevated geological formation.  Not the sort of reference that crops up in everyday conversation at the coffee shop.

But, you never know.  Try it next time you have coffee and see what happens.

Featured

Writing about writing a book – Day 2

Hang about.  Didn’t I read somewhere you need to plan your novel, create an outline setting the plot points, and flesh out the characters?

I’m sure it didn’t say, sit down and start writing!

Time to find a writing pad, and put my thinking cap on.

I make a list, what’s the story going to be about? Who’s going to be in it, at least at the start?

Like a newspaper story, I need a who, what, when, where, and how.

Right now.

 

I pick up the pen.

 

Character number one:

Computer nerd, ok, that’s a little close to the bone, a computer manager who is trying to be everything at once, and failing.  Still me, but with a twist.  Now, add a little mystery to him, and give him a secret, one that will only be revealed after a specific set of circumstance.  Yes, I like that.

We’ll call him Bill, ex-regular army, a badly injured and repatriated soldier who was sent to fight a war in Vietnam, the result of which had made him, at times, unfit to live with.

He had a wife, which brings us to,

Character number two:

Ellen, Bill’s ex-wife, an army brat and a General’s daughter, and the result of one of those romances that met disapproval for so many reasons.  It worked until Bill came back from the war, and from there it slowly disintegrated.  There are two daughters, both by the time the novel begins, old enough to understand the ramifications of a divorce.

Character number three:

The man who is Bill’s immediate superior, the Services Department manager, a rather officious man who blindly follows orders, a man who takes pleasure in making others feel small and insignificant, and worst of all, takes the credit where none is due.

Oops, too much, that is my old boss.  He’ll know immediately I’m parodying him.  Tone it down, just a little, but more or less that’s him.  Last name Benton.  He will play a small role in the story.

Character number four:

Jennifer, the IT Department’s assistant manager, a woman who arrives in a shroud of mystery, and then, in time, to provide Bill with a shoulder to cry on when he and Ellen finally split, and perhaps something else later on.

More on her later as the story unfolds.

So far so good.

What’s the plot?

Huge corporation plotting to take over the world using computers?  No, that’s been done to death.

Huge corporation, OK, let’s stop blaming the corporate world for everything wrong in the world.  Corporations are not bad people, people are the bad people.  That’s a rip off cliché, from guns don’t kill people, people kill people!  There will be guns, and there will be dead people.

There will be people hiding behind a huge corporation, using a part of their computer network to move billions of illegally gained money around.  That’s better.

Now, having got that, our ‘hero’ has to ‘discover’ this network, and the people behind it.

All we need now is to set the ball rolling, a single event that ‘throws a cat among the pigeons’.

Yes, Bill is on holidays, a welcome relief from the problems of work.  He dreams of what he’s going to do for the next two weeks.  The phone rings.  Benton calling, the world is coming to an end, the network is down.  He’s needed.  A few terse words, but he relents.

Pen in hand I begin to write.

 

© Charles Heath 2016-2019

A photograph from the inspirational bin – 53

What story does it inspire?

While in reality, this is just an ordinary lake at a resort we stayed at a while back and can be used for canoeing.

During summer the surrounding undergrowth is a haven for snakes, and it is not a good idea to wander too close.

Hardly the place to spur the imagination…

Unless, of course, you start thinking about the ethereal aspects it could possess. For instance, it might be the place where the ghosts of those who drowned come out to play at night.

It might be a lake in the middle of what was once an experimental site that needed a lot of water, and that tainted water might be the haven for mysterious creatures.

Ot it just might be part of a disused government secret site, long abandoned, with buildings and infrastructure just waiting for the right explorer to visit. Again, the ghosts of those who once were there could just be the reason why no one goes near the place.

And, what if there was an extensive, and invisible network of underground rooms. Above ground, just a pond and surrounding overgrown gardens, underneath, well, that’s up to you.

“Trouble in Store” – Short Stories my way: The end of the story

The stage is set for the big finale, though I’m not quite sure how ‘big’ it’s going to be.

Jack is ready to go having been given the green light by the girl with the gun.  It seems collateral damage is not on the agenda for her, though he does admit to himself she is between that proverbial rock and a hard place.

The storekeeper still has a plan, shaky at best, to regain hold of the situation, once the customer is out of the shop.  Nervy or not, he doesn’t think she had the capability to pull the trigger.  He knows what sort of person it takes to do that, and she isn’t one of them.

The policewoman is not sure what to expect but thinks that surprise is on her side, and whatever is going on, she will be able to resolve it.  She has her weapon drawn and ready to use.  She had yet to shoot anyone with it

The girl is at the point of no return, that point where she had nothing left to lose.  Anything she had before was gone, destroyed by the choices she’d made.  No one ever handed out a manual on how you should live your life, or provide a list of people you should avoid, and her father’s prophetic words the last time they men came home with a thud, ‘your life is defined by the choices you make’.

She was not going to jail so it was going to be death or glory.

 

Now read on:

 

Jack had heard there were moments where, in a split second, your whole life flashes before your eyes.  He did, and what he saw he didn’t like.

But, then, neither was he very happy about the fact he was nearly out the door before the policewoman on the other side crashed into him and sent him sprawling to the floor.

That was about the same fraction of a second he heard the gun go off, twice, or so he thought and knew he was a dead man, waiting for the bullet.

Another fraction of a second passed as the policewoman tried to unravel the mess they’d become, and at that moment in time felt the tugging at his sleeve and then, as if in slow motion, the sound of the glass door disintegrating behind him.

 

Annalisa was quite prepared to let the customer go.

She kept one eye on the shopkeeper and one on the customer, sidling towards the door.  The gun was ready to shoot the first person who made a wrong move.

Or so she told herself.  It was getting heavy in her hand, she was shaking almost uncontrollably now, and was getting more and more frightened of the consequences.  She didn’t think, if she aimed, she could hit the side of a barn let alone a person standing ten feet away from her.

The customer reached the door.

At exactly the moment he put his hand 0on the door handle to open the door, another person was pushing the door, trying to make their way in.

With force.

She saw the blue cap, guess it was the police, though she hadn’t heard the siren, but also guessed the shopkeeper might have a silent alarm.

Damn.

A single shot, instantly in the direction of the door, not necessarily aimed at the two people now collapsing to the floor in a tangled mess, but at the door itself.

The impact, yet another guess, might shatter the glass and make it easier to escape.

After one more job.

The hell with Simmo.  He’d dragged her down the rabbit hole far enough.  Simmo knew her first name, that she had rich parents, but nothing else.  Besides, he was in such bad shape she didn’t think he’d recover.

The shopkeeper had no idea who she was, it was the first time she’d been to his shop, and now, after a few weeks with Simmo, not ever her mother would recognize her.

She swiveled the gun and aimed it at the shopkeeper and pulled the trigger.,  One less dealer in the city was good news not bad.

She saw it hit, not exactly where, but it caused him to twist and start falling to the ground, at the same time letting out a very loud scream.  Panic or anger?

She wasn’t waiting to find out.

A last glance at Simmo, now down for the count, she ran for the door, past the two on the floor, what she could now see was a policewoman with her weapon drawn, but unable to use it.

She crashed through the remainder of the glass shards put into the street and ran.

In the distance she could hear a police car coming, siren blaring.  A warning if there was ever one to run harder, up the road, down an alley, out into another street, then down into the subway.

Gone.

 

It took fifteen seconds to disentangle herself from the customer, pushing him away, and getting to her feet, weapon aimed.

At nothing but air.

The girl had gone, and then she had the vague recollection of a shadow passing her as she was facing the other way getting to her feet.

And running out the door.

Five more valuable seconds as her brain processed this piece of information before it issued the command to go out the door and see which way she went.

Another ten seconds to get out the door, and see the police car coming from the same direction she had earlier, screeching to a halt outside the shop, a car door opening, and an officer getting out.

Margaret was guessing at the driver to drive down the road where she guessed the girl had run, managing to yell breathlessly at the office getting out, “She’s gone that way,” and pointing.

The officer relayed the message and closed the door as the car sped off.

“What happened?”

“Shots fired by a woman, more a girl, in the process of a robbery.”

She ran back inside the officer following.

The customer had moved to a corner and was standing, testing his limbs, with an expression that said he was amazed he was still alive.

“Over behind the counter.  She shopkeeper.  He was standing there.”

The policeman rounded the end of the counter and looked down.  “He’s here.  It’s not looking good.”

Margaret didn’t hear him.  She was calling an ambulance.

 

Next:  Perhaps some editing

 

© Charles Heath 2016-2020

 

365 Days of writing, 2026 – 66/67

Days 66 and 67 – Writing exercise

Take a moment in your past, and turn yourself into a character and express your feelings about it

Some things happen that happen for a reason, even though at the time we do not understand the why, only that the result was not what we expected.

Sometimes that is a negative, and causes pause for thought the next time it happens.  Or it is a positive and sends us in a direction that is borne out of experience.

I am by nature an introvert, the sort of person who keeps to himself.  I learned the hard way to mind my own business and not interfere.  The physical scars had healed, but the mental scars are much harder to recover from.

School taught me that trust is not given freely and that it has to be earned.  Of course, the hurdles to get there are often almost insurmountable, but in the end, you learn one of life’s very valuable lessons.

When I graduated from school, not exactly at the top of the class, not the bottom, but it was enough for me to realise I was not suitable material for college or university.  That being the csse my choices were limited.

Stay on the farm and work alongside my father and some of my brothers and sisters, find a job in town, like a storeman at the hardware; or a general hand in one of the fast food outlets. 

Then there was the factory, where eventually all of us, without any schooling, ended up. It was tedious and back-breaking work, but no one questioned your past, your education, or your work ethic.

It was like the army.  You just slotted in and did your bit and didn’t let anyone down.  It suited me, I didn’t have to mix, and I was left alone, even by those who were from school and definitely not my friends.

That took care of the days.

Then there was Friday night at the bar, a rowdy place with everyone having what might be called a good time for some, and for others, a little sport. 

It could get rough; some of those who drank too much became violent, but mostly you were happy, had dinner, a few drinks, shot pool, talked about everything and nothing and then went home.

At first, I avoided it.  I had been drunk before, but that was at home, the typical I’m going to try everything once, and it wasn’t a good experience.  Seeing others so, without inhibitions or quick to temper, your night could very easily end up in the emergency ward at the hospital.

I’d been there a few times when my brothers got on the wrong end of the argument.  That and a night in the sheriff’s cells for drunk and disorderly.  Once was enough, if you learned the lesson.  Quite a few didn’t.

So, having avoided it long enough, I agreed to go with a couple of other chaps with a similar reluctance.  We had been the guys the football jocks beat up on because they could.

Of course, in the year after leaving school and working at home until I couldn’t take my father or eldest brother riding me, I learned how to defend myself.  It was something I should have done at school, but couldn’t.  I needed money, and no one at home would pay. 

Going to work elsewhere, I quickly discovered, gave me independence and the ability to begin living my own life, mistakes and all.

Joe’s Bar and Grill was in a huge barn at the edge of town on the main road out.  It had been there as long as anyone could remember, as far back as the days when the railway arrived, and the ranchers could send their cattle on.

One of those places where the country met the rail head, cattle going out and people coming in.  For a while, it drove the town into a city.

The cowboys would stay until the money ran out, and then everything went back to normal.  In between times, the townsfolk, what was left of them, spent Friday night, the traditional end of the working week, letting their hair down, and Saturdays, where families celebrated together in a more convivial atmosphere.

Friday night was where it all happened.  The night wore on, and the drinks were flowing, which started off noisy and sometimes turned ugly.  It’s why the deputies were on hand to make sure it didn’t get out of hand. That was the theory.

Alex, Will and I, with a name like Ken, the three musketeers, had all landed jobs at the factory.  We didn’t work together, but we all met up at breaks.  We kept out of everyone’s line of sight and did our jobs.

It was Alex’s idea that we go.  Have a few drinks, see who was there and who wasn’t, and if truth be known, Alex was looking for Lola.

That last year of school, he had a thing for her, but she was more interested in the athletic types, and I could have told him he was wasting his time.  But the lovelorn will not accept advice readily, and he came to grief.  When he asked her to be his date at the prom, she just laughed at him.

Will and I knew better than to waste our time.  Of course, we were not immune to those first pangs of romance.  I dabbled, asking oblique questions of what I thought was an exile from the mean girls, Lizzie, but discovered quickly she was unavailable.

Fair enough.  I had the sense to walk away.

I’d since learned that her aspirations for college had run aground her parents’ end of downsizing, and left with the same opportunities as most who found themselves on the unemployment line.

There seemed to be more and more of these days, along with the shuttering of stores on the main street. 

And despite everything that had happened, and the likelihood of what might happen, we arrived, parked the truck, got out and surveyed the scene before us.  Crowded, noisy, and a powder keg waiting to explode.

I counted half a dozen cruisers and ten deputies I could see, hanging back, waiting.

Four pick-ups in a convoy arrived and parked out front.  Spaces reserved for the management and VIPs.

“No show without punch, eh?” Alex muttered.

One might have regarded Sam Blackstone as a VIP, but his father was some big shot back east, and Sam somehow believed her was the prodigal son.

He made the big league, got drunk after his first big game, tripped and fell down the stairs, and now had a permanent limp and nothing to brag about

Other than the big shot father who never came home.

But that didn’t stop him from being the leader of a bunch of entitled guys who basically did what they pleased.

We avoided them.

“We shouldn’t be doing this,” Will said.  “Remember the last time?”

I think we would.  We got our asses handed to us.

“It’s different this time.”  Alex wasn’t going to forgive or forget.  He attended the same self-defence classes that the three of us did.

Will and I were there for self-defence, Alex was there for vengeance.

“I think Will’s right,” I said, hoping to save him from himself, but judging by his posture and expression, reasoning was out.

“You go.  I can do this.”

Will and I looked at each other and shrugged. Alex, on his own, would only get so far.  As the three musketeers, we might just get out alive.

Joe’s Bar and Grill was Sam’s home turf.

Four trucks, one boss and seven mates.  I’d heard about their antics, second-hand from my sister, Will
Eileen, whose best friend was Lizzie, yes, that Lizzie, whose older brother was a deputy.

Well, it is now back to being a small town where everyone knew everyone else.

Last advice, Sam had finally worn out the new Sheriff’s patience. Times had changed, the old sheriff got voted out after a corruption charge was brought against him, not proven, but the local folks figured it was time for a change.

The memo hadn’t reached Sam.  Yet.

Alex started walking towards the front entrance.  I shrugged.  “In for a penny…”

Will just sighed.  “This is going to be fun.”  The way he said it, I knew what he meant.  This was going yo be anything but fun.

Dodger, the nickname we gave to the guy on the door, was from the fact that when the fighting started, he disappeared.

“You guys ain’t been here for a while.”

“Nope,” I said.  “And judging by the noise, nothing’s changed much.”

“We’ve got a bucking bull.”

He was taking us literally.  On Dodger could do that.  The other door guys would have just ignored us.

“I’ll be sure to check it out,” I said.

Past the threshold, it was wall-to-wall people.  Such was Joe’s fame that people came from far and wide.

In front of us, the bar, which stretched from the front to the back, was double-sided.  One side served the pool tables and the bucking bulls, the other tables, and further back, the dance floor.

A gun could go off, and no one would hear it.

“I’ll get a table, you two get drinks and try to stay out of trouble.”  He disappeared into the fog

We went to the bar.  Men served the drinks, the girls delivered them to the tables, and there was also a mix of ‘get your own’, or ‘have it served at your table’, giving the girls a tip.

I heard a rumour that Lizzie and her friends worked as waitresses on Friday and Saturday, the tips adding nicely to their bank accounts, despite the unruly and sometimes bad behaviour of certain customers.

I got the first round, and we went into the fog, and minutes later stumbled into the table where Will was sitting.  A waitress, not Lizzie, came past and slopped a wet rag over the table top and kept going.

We sat.

“Where did Sam go?  I didn’t see him when I was at the bar.”  Will might have seen him on his way to the table.  A shake of the head said no.

“What do you want to know for?”

“So trouble does sneak up on us.”

I was not sure why I was so worried.  We were too small for him to be bothered with.

And by the time an hour had passed, we were approaching the bewitching hour, so named because it was about the time those who had too much and were supposed to be elected by management started to arc up.

The crowd had thinned, but there were still a lot of people there.  The line dancing was getting a little erratic as the booze started to take effect, and already one skirmish had broken out.

The deputies appeared and escorted the guilty to the van and taken to the drunk tank.  It was a sombre warning to others

We had shifted to the bar, and that’s when I saw Lizzie.  She came back and was not far from us.  She looked tired and oddly dishevelled.

And angry.

I slid off my chair and went over.

When she turned, I said, “How are you, Liz?”

I remembered just in time that she hated being called Lizzie.

“How do you think I am?”  It exploded out of her.  Something had happened.

“I know you don’t like me, but that’s a bit strong when a ‘I’m fine, piss off’ spoken politely would have sufficed.”

I turned to go back.

“Sorry.”

I stopped and turned. 

“I’m having a bad night,” she said, sadly, like it was a permanent fact.

“Wouldn’t that be every Friday?”

“No, only those when Sam and his thugs come.  Thinks he owns the place, and that we are at his beck and call.”

“Be worth the tips.”

She snorted.  “Insults, maybe.  Not money.  Not anything.”

“You’re his gopher?”

“And Sally, and Brigitte.  I don’t think there’s a girl under 25 he hasn’t had his way with.  But it’s our own fault for believing the scumbag.”

The barkeep put a tray of drinks on the bar.

“Gotta go.  Ken, isn’t it?  You dodged a bullet, Ken.  I’m not worthy of anything or anyone any more.”

A last look, this one carrying so much despair it nearly brought me to tears.

I had hoped I would miss Sam, but if he was the one who had broken Lizzie, then I was going to make it my mission to break him.

A little more than he already was.

He was down the back, in a booth, flanked by thugs and sitting with three fresh faces, girls who had not experienced the Sam charm offensive.

I watched Lizzie drop the tray on the table, knocking over a bottle, and everyone watching it roll onto his lap.

Silence.  In this corner.

She apologised.  He picked up the bottle and looked like he was going to throw it at her. She flinched in a way I knew this was not the first time, and that was when I said, “You do that, Sam, and it’ll be the last thing you do tonight.”

Three things happened.

First, the two thugs and the two girls got out from behind the table faster than I’d ever seen anyone move, the girls moving away, the thugs positioning themselves so I couldn’t run.

My intention wasn’t to run, but always have an exit just in case.  I picked one.

I motioned for Lizzie to step behind me, and after a moment’s hesitation, she did.  I thought Sam might stop her, but he didn’t.  He had a bigger fish to try.

Second, four of his other thugs came running, but in the crowd, which seemed to close up, it was hard to make headway.  Then Will and Alex appeared, and with two quick and subtle moments, the four were on the floor writhing in agony.

They had simply used their momentum and excess weight, and the degree of intoxication against them.  They took up positions near the two thugs who had been sitting at the table.

Third, the crowd closed in, making it impossible for the deputies to get through.  There was something in the air, and it wasn’t support for Sam.

Not that he would have seen it that way.

Slowly, and very deliberately, he slid out from behind the table and stood.  There was no doubt he was an impressive size, six inches taller and fifty pounds or more.

Enough to scare anyone into submission.

Except he had one weakness.

He came around to the front of the table and leaned against it, shaking his head.

“Little Kenny.  My, my, you’re a bit out of your depth now, aren’t you?  This thing you had for Lizzie now gets you the mother of all lessons in when to mind your own business.”

Let the man talk.  Talk is cheap.  Talk gives confidence, because he’s trying to build a wall, one that he thinks will protect him and make him stronger.

A hush came over the whole building.  The deputies were coming.  This confrontation wasn’t going to last more than a few minutes.

“I see you’ve got your girlfriends with you.”

He was taunting Alex and Will.  They were not going to be taunted, not after putting down four of his thugs. He’d missed that sideshow.

Sam still had the bottle in his hand.  I knew what he was going to do with it.  He had a hunting knife on him, but that would be too clean.  A jagged-edged bottle that could do some damage.

“Let’s take this outside.”

Better that way.  He wouldn’t get banned, and he could shift the blame to me for starting it.

“You can leave any time you like, Sam.  I have a Bud to finish before I go.”

Another shake of the head, then he smashed the top of the empty bottle in his hand, exposing a jagged edge that would leave a nasty cut.

Eyes darting left and right, he launched himself at me with the bottle, heading straight for my neck.  Three seconds, a swift dodge to the left, and a foot perfectly placed where they glued his leg back together.

Everyone heard it crack, everyone heard the scream, and then everyone heard the bull elephant hit the floor and go very still.

Then the sheriff and two deputies burst through the crowd.  No one had said a word.  Nothing.  His friends didn’t move.  Alex had one, Will had the other, and they let them go just as the deputies entered the bull ring.

The two deputies went over to Sam.  The sheriff looked around the crowd, a sea of stunned faces.

“What happened here?”

Thirty seconds before you’ve called out, “Sam was about to throw a bottle at the waitress.”

Another, “He does it all the time.  Hurts them, they all laugh like it’s nothing.”

Another, ” His friends are just as bad.”   Suddenly, the crowd thrust them forward as they tried to blend in.  Alex and Will had disappeared.

“Again, what happened?”  He was sensing a shift in mood.

“That fella told him not to throw the bottle.”

Fingers pointed at me.  I was standing back from but alongside Sam, who still hadn’t moved.  The two deputies were struggling to turn him over.  One was calling for an ambulance.

The sheriff and I knew each other.  I had to bail my brothers out of jail a few times.  I told him ai was the quiet one.  Perhaps that might change very soon.

Behind me, I felt a hand slip into mine and a gentle squeeze.  Then, as quickly as it had happened, it was gone.

“Ken, isn’t it?”

“Sheriff.”

“You told Sam not to throw the bottle?”

“At the waitress, yeah.  Apparently, he’s done it before.  Also physically assaults them, sir.”

“You seem to have done it?”

“I saw the end result of his ministrations, sir.  I know his reputation, sir.  I’ve seen him doing it at school.  Under-age girls.  His parents but them off.”

“Hearsay, Ken.”

A girl’s voice yelled out.  It’s the truth, Sheriff.  It’s you gutless bastards that enabled him.”

The sheriff tried to see who it was, but the crowd closed ranks.

Another deputy came, a bigger man, and together the three rolled him over.  The jagged bottle was sticking out of his upper leg, a bloody mess.

One deputy vomited.  Another pulled off his belt and made a tourniquet.  The other was screaming at dispatch to get an ambulance.

The sheriff looked at me.  “You do this?”

A voice yelled out, “But he did not.”

A ripple of agreement went through the crowd.

He picked one.  “What happened?”

“Sam was leaning against the table.  They were talking.  Then, suddenly, he launched himself at Ken.  Then that same instant, his leg gave out, the gummy one he wrecked being drunk and stupid.  Like tonight.  Went down like the sack shit he is and stabbed himself.  Had he not, Ken would be dead.”

“Anyone else?”

“Smashed the bottle himself, same one he was going to chuck at the girl.  Poetic justice, it’s called.”

The sheriff couldn’t quite put the pieces together to make a believable story.

His eyes stopped on one of the thugs.  “What’s your version?”

“It’s the only version.  His leg gave out, and he stabbed himself.  Fucking fool.”

“You sign a statement to that effect?”

“Everyone will.  He’s terrorised this place, this town, for long enough.”

The sheriff sighed.  “Everyone, go sit down. This is going to be a long night.”

Just then, the ambulance arrived, and the crowd opened up to let the paramedics through.  “Don’t you five go anywhere.”  He pointed at me, the two thugs, Lizzie and the first witness.  He assigned a deputy to watch us after we were taken to a corner with several lounges.

Liz sat next to me.

“Thank you.  You didn’t have to.”

“You should be able to work here and not be afraid. I did what any decent person would.”

“That’s your first mistake.  There ain’t no decent people.  Except maybe you?”

“We’re all tarred with the same brush.  You told mr that.”

“I said a lot of shit back then, cause I didn’t know any better.  You’re not like them.”

“Not if you take in what happened here.”

“That’s different.”

“More violence doesn’t stop violence.  It just makes matters worse.”

“Or better.  You’ll see.”

Sam dies in the ambulance on the way to the hospital. 

The sheriff received 345 witness statements that all said the same thing.  Sam was attacking me, unprovoked, his leg gave out, and he killed himself.  The medical examiner called it death by misadventure. 

No one was to blame.

Except his father and brothers turned up at the family ranch, accusing me of killing Sam, at which my father and brothers fell over laughing so hard.

When they refused to leave, my father got his shotgun, called them trespassers and shot at them. A rather expensive car was severely damaged during the process.

The sheriff was told that when Sam’s father came to him with sworn statements that I was the murderer, he tore them up and said if he wanted to press charges, Sam would be posthumously charged with 15 counts of rape and over a thousand charges of sexual assault, grievous bodily harm, attempted murder, kidnapping, and bribery.

He brought out three boxes of sworn statements and said he was ready to start proceedings today.  All he had to do was give the word, and the press packages would be sent out.

It was no surprise that the father left and never came back.  The two brothers, who thought they would take matters into their own hands, disappeared.

They simply disappeared.

As for Elizabeth, who liked to be called Eliza, let the storm blow through like a prairie wind and one morning turned up at my cabin, at the foot of the hills, in one of the most peaceful places in the county.

She looked radiant.

It had taken a lot to get over the trauma involving Sam.  She was one of those he raped.  It had led to a pregnancy, and after nine months, the baby was stillborn.  It almost killed her, but my mother and her First Nation instincts took her to a healing place and brought her back from what could only be called a very dark place.

She held out her hand, and I took it. Then she said the four words I had been waiting for, “I have come home.”

It was something else I never knew or understood, not until the night I stepped between Sam and Elizabeth.

Our heritage, the ways of my mother’s people, going back into the depths of time, and our affinity with the land and the animals and the spirits.

Things could have turned out very badly that night.

They did not, and for that I would be forever thankful, living in, and surrounded by a world I never knew existed.

©  Charles Heath  2026

Searching for locations – Port Macquarie – Day 5 – Part 1

Timbertown

Timbertown is based on a timber getters township between 1880 and 1910. All the buildings are based on original plans and sit among Tallowwoods and Blackbutts. Most of the red cedar has been cut down.

it might have made a bigger impact if there were people dressed in period costumes enacting roles in the various buildings.

Only one was used being used as a General Store.

The stables where the carriages are kept

There was a horse-drawn carriage, which does a circuit of the town.

It would not be a comfortable ride these days with independent suspension and solid steel wheels, giving bone-jarring passing through the potholes.

And a ride in a stagecoach from city to city, you would have to think long and hard before you travel.

What I learned about writing – Easy reading/Hard writing

I often wondered when reading other authors’ works if it was as hard for them to write the story as it is for me.

I mean, it’s not that hard to get that initial first draft down on paper. What is hard is honing that messy, often shapeless story into the finished product, which often is an easy read for the reader.

I used to devour a book in a night, sometimes a day or two, but the reading never reflected the blood, sweat and tears the author put into it.

And I doubt the reader gets that.

Everything takes time to create.  A car, a house, a factory, an apartment block.  You can cut corners, and the object will fall to pieces or fail in some other manner.

If you cut corners when polishing a story, making it easy for the reader to devour, when it is not, no one will buy your books.

So, creating that polished book is no easy task.  It’s not simply a matter of getting the words on paper and sending them off to the publisher.

It doesn’t work that way.

I’m sure after writing that first draft, and when you pick it up some months later to start the editing process, that first read will be like climbing a sheer mountain without climbing gear.

It certainly will not read the way a reader expects it to.  In fact, you will probably not recognise what it is you wrote, or if you did, you don’t remember writing it that way.

That’s why you have beta readers.

That’s why you have an editor.

Just hope they realise perfection takes time. 

An excerpt from “One Last Look”: Charlotte is no ordinary girl

This is currently available at Amazon herehttp://amzn.to/2CqUBcz

I’d read about out-of-body experiences, and like everyone else, thought it was nonsense.  Some people claimed to see themselves in the operating theatre, medical staff frantically trying to revive them, and being surrounded by white light.

I was definitely looking down, but it wasn’t me I was looking at.

It was two children, a boy and a girl, with their parents, in a park.

The boy was Alan.  He was about six or seven.  The girl was Louise, and she was five years old.  She had long red hair and looked the image of her mother.

I remember it now, it was Louise’s birthday and we went down to Bournemouth to visit our Grandmother, and it was the last time we were all together as a family.

We were flying homemade kites our father had made for us, and after we lay there looking up at the sky, making animals out of the clouds.  I saw an elephant, Louise saw a giraffe.

We were so happy then.

Before the tragedy.

When I looked again ten years had passed and we were living in hell.  Louise and I had become very adept at survival in a world we really didn’t understand, surrounded by people who wanted to crush our souls.

It was not a life a normal child had, our foster parents never quite the sort of people who were adequately equipped for two broken-hearted children.  They tried their best, but their best was not good enough.

Every day it was a battle, to avoid the Bannister’s and Archie in particular, every day he made advances towards Louise and every day she fended him off.

Until one day she couldn’t.

Now I was sitting in the hospital, holding Louise’s hand.  She was in a coma, and the doctors didn’t think she would wake from it.  The damage done to her was too severe.

The doctors were wrong.

She woke, briefly, to name her five assailants.  It was enough to have them arrested.  It was not enough to have them convicted.

Justice would have to be served by other means.

I was outside the Bannister’s home.

I’d made my way there without really thinking, after watching Louise die.  It was like being on autopilot, and I had no control over what I was doing.  I had murder in mind.  It was why I was holding an iron bar.

Skulking in the shadows.  It was not very different from the way the Bannister’s operated.

I waited till Archie came out.  I knew he eventually would.  The police had taken him to the station for questioning, and then let him go.  I didn’t understand why, nor did I care.

I followed him up the towpath, waiting till he stopped to light a cigarette, then came out of the shadows.

“Wotcha got there Alan?” he asked when he saw me.  He knew what it was, and what it was for.

It was the first time I’d seen the fear in his eyes.  He was alone.

“Justice.”

“For that slut of a sister of yours.  I had nuffing to do with it.”

“She said otherwise, Archie.”

“She never said nuffing, you just made it up.”  An attempt at bluster, but there was no confidence in his voice.

I held up the pipe.  It had blood on it.  Willy’s blood.  “She may or may not have Archie, but Willy didn’t make it up.  He sang like a bird.  That’s his blood, probably brains on the pipe too, Archie, and yours will be there soon enough.”

“He dunnit, not me.  Lyin’ bastard would say anything to save his own skin.”  Definitely scared now, he was looking to run away.

“No, Archie.  He didn’t.  I’m coming for you.  All of you Bannisters.  And everyone who touched my sister.”

It was the recurring nightmare I had for years afterwards.

I closed my eyes and tried to shut out the thoughts, the images of Louise, the phone call, the visit to the hospital and being there when she succumbed to her injuries.  Those were the very worst few hours of my life.

She had asked me to come to the railway station and walk home with her, and I was running late.  If I had left when I was supposed to, it would never have happened and for years afterwards, I blamed myself for her death.

If only I’d not been late…

When the police finally caught the rapists, I’d known all along who they’d be; antagonists from school, the ring leader, Archie Bannister, a spurned boyfriend, a boy whose parents, ubiquitously known to all as ‘the Bannister’s, dealt in violence and crime and who owned the neighbourhood.  The sins of the father had been very definitely passed onto the son.

At school, I used to be the whipping boy, Archie, a few grades ahead of me, made a point of belting me and a few of the other boys, to make sure the rest did as they were told.  He liked Louise, but she had no time for a bully like him, even when he promised he would ‘protect’ me.

I knew the gang members, the boys who tow-kowed to save getting beaten up, and after the police couldn’t get enough information to prosecute them because everyone was too afraid to speak out, I went after Willy.  There was always a weak link in a group, and he was it.

He worked in a factory, did long hours on a Wednesday and came home after dark alone.  It was a half mile walk, through a park.  The night I approached him, I smashed the lights and left it in darkness.  He nearly changed his mind and went the long way home.

He didn’t.

It took an hour and a half to get the names.  At first, when he saw me, he laughed.  He said I would be next, and that was four words more than he knew he should have said.

When I found him alone the next morning I showed him the iron bar and told him he was on the list.  I didn’t kill him then, he could wait his turn, and worry about what was going to happen to him.

When the police came to visit me shortly after that encounter, no doubt at the behest of the Bannister’s, the neighbourhood closed ranks and gave me an ironclad alibi.  The Bannister’s then came to visit me and threatened me.  I told them their days were numbered and showed them the door.

At the trial, he and his friends got off on a technicality.  The police had failed to do their job properly, but it was not the police, but a single policeman, corrupted by the Bannisters.

Archie could help but rub it in my face.  He was invincible.

Joe Collins took 12 bullets and six hours to bleed out.  He apologized, he pleaded, he cried, he begged.  I didn’t care.

Barry Mills, a strong lad with a mind to hurting people, Archie’s enforcer, almost got the better of me.  I had to hit him more times than I wanted to, and in the end, I had to be satisfied that he died a short but agonizing death.

I revisited Willy in the hospital.  He’d recovered enough to recognize me, and why I’d come.  Suffocation was too good for him.

David Williams, second in command of the gang, was as tough and nasty as the Bannisters.  His family were forging a partnership with the Bannister’s to make them even more powerful.  Outwardly David was a pleasant sort of chap, affable, polite, and well mannered.  A lot of people didn’t believe he could be like, or working with, the Bannisters.

He and I met in the pub.  We got along like old friends.  He said Willy had just named anyone he could think of, and that he was innocent of any charges.  We shook hands and parted as friends.

Three hours later he was sitting in a chair in the middle of a disused factory, blindfolded and scared.  I sat and watched him, listened to him, first threatening me, and then finally pleading with me.  He’d guessed who it was that had kidnapped him.

When it was dark, I took the blindfold off and shone a very bright light in his eyes.  I asked him if the violence he had visited upon my sister was worth it.  He told me he was just a spectator.

I’d read the coroner’s report.  They all had a turn.  He was a liar.

He took nineteen bullets to die.

Then came Archie.

The same factory only this time there were four seats.  Anna Bannister, brothel owner, Spike Bannister, head of the family, Emily Bannister, sister, and who had nothing to do with their criminal activities.  She just had the misfortune of sharing their name.

Archie’s father told me how he was going to destroy me, and everyone I knew.

A well-placed bullet between the eyes shut him up.

Archie’s mother cursed me.  I let her suffer for an hour before I put her out of her misery.

Archie remained stony-faced until I came to Emily.  The death of his parents meant he would become head of the family.  I guess their deaths meant as little to him as they did me.

He was a little more worried about his sister.

I told him it was confession time.

He told her it was little more than a forced confession and he had done nothing to deserve my retribution.

I shrugged and shot her, and we both watched her fall to the ground screaming in agony.  I told him if he wanted her to live, he had to genuinely confess to his crimes.  This time he did, it all poured out of him.

I went over to Emily.  He watched in horror as I untied her bindings and pulled her up off the floor, suffering only from a small wound in her arm.  Without saying a word she took the gun and walked over to stand behind him.

“Louise was my friend, Archie.  My friend.”

Then she shot him.  Six times.

To me, after saying what looked like a prayer, she said, “Killing them all will not bring her back, Alan, and I doubt she would approve of any of this.  May God have mercy on your soul.”

Now I was in jail.  I’d spent three hours detailing the deaths of the five boys, everything I’d done; a full confession.  Without my sister, my life was nothing.  I didn’t want to go back to the foster parents; I doubt they’d take back a murderer.

They were not allowed to.

For a month I lived in a small cell, in solitary, no visitors.  I believed I was in the queue to be executed, and I had mentally prepared myself for the end.

Then I was told I had a visitor, and I was expecting a priest.

Instead, it was a man called McTavish. Short, wiry, and with an accent that I could barely understand.

“You’ve been a bad boy, Alan.”

When I saw it was not the priest I told the jailers not to let him in, I didn’t want to speak to anyone.  They ignored me.  I’d expected he was a psychiatrist, come to see whether I should be shipped off to the asylum.

I was beginning to think I was going mad.

I ignored him.

“I am the difference between you living or dying Alan, it’s as simple as that.  You’d be a wise man to listen to what I have to offer.”

Death sounded good.  I told him to go away.

He didn’t.  Persistent bugger.

I was handcuffed to the table.  The prison officers thought I was dangerous.  Five, plus two, murders, I guess they had a right to think that.  McTavish sat opposite me, ignoring my request to leave.

“Why’d you do it?”

“You know why.”  Maybe if I spoke he’d go away.

“Your sister.  By all accounts, the scum that did for her deserved what they got.”

“It was murder just the same.  No difference between scum and proper people.”

“You like killing?”

“No-one does.”

“No, I dare say you’re right.  But you’re different, Alan.  As clean and merciless killing I’ve ever seen.  We can use a man like you.”

“We?”

“A group of individuals who clean up the scum.”

I looked up to see his expression, one of benevolence, totally out of character for a man like him.  It looked like I didn’t have a choice.

Trained, cleared, and ready to go.

I hadn’t realized there were so many people who were, for all intents and purposes, invisible.  People that came and went, in malls, in hotels, trains, buses, airports, everywhere, people no one gave a second glance.

People like me.

In a mall, I became a shopper.

In a hotel, I was just another guest heading to his room.

On a bus or a train, I was just another commuter.

At the airport, I became a pilot.  I didn’t need to know how to fly; everyone just accepted a pilot in a pilot suit was just what he looked like.

I had a passkey.

I had the correct documents to get me onto the plane.

That walk down the air bridge was the longest of my life.  Waiting for the call from the gate, waiting for one of the air bridge staff to challenge me, stepping onto the plane.

Two pilots and a steward.  A team.  On the plane early before the rest of the crew.  A group that was committing a crime, had committed a number of crimes and thought they’d got away with it.

Until the judge, the jury and their executioner arrived.

Me.

Quick, clean, merciless.  Done.

I was now an operational field agent.

I was older now, and I could see in the mirror I was starting to go grey at the sides.  It was far too early in my life for this, but I expect it had something to do with my employment.

I didn’t recognize the man who looked back at me.

It was certainly not Alan McKenzie, nor was there any part of that fifteen-year-old who had made the decision to exact revenge.

Given a choice; I would not have gone down this path.

Or so I kept telling myself each time a little more of my soul was sold to the devil.

I was Barry Gamble.

I was Lenny Buckman.

I was Jimmy Hosen.

I was anyone but the person I wanted to be.

That’s what I told Louise, standing in front of her grave, and trying to apologize for all the harm, all the people I’d killed for that one rash decision.  If she was still alive she would be horrified, and ashamed.

Head bowed, tears streamed down my face.

God had gone on holiday and wasn’t there to hand out any forgiveness.  Not that day.  Not any day.

New York, New Years Eve.

I was at the end of a long tour, dragged out of a holiday and back into the fray, chasing down another scumbag.  They were scumbags, and I’d become an automaton hunting them down and dispatching them to what McTavish called a better place.

This time I failed.

A few drinks to blot out the failure, a blonde woman who pushed my buttons, a room in a hotel, any hotel, it was like being on the merry-go-round, round and round and round…

Her name was Silvia or Sandra, or someone I’d met before, but couldn’t quite place her.  It could be an enemy agent for all I knew or all I cared right then.

I was done.

I’d had enough.

I gave her the gun.

I begged her to kill me.

She didn’t.

Instead, I simply cried, letting the pent up emotion loose after being suppressed for so long, and she stayed with me, holding me close, and saying I was safe, that she knew exactly how I felt.

How could she?  No one could know what I’d been through.

I remembered her name after she had gone.

Amanda.

I remembered she had an imperfection in her right eye.

Someone else had the same imperfection.

I couldn’t remember who that was.

Not then.

I had a dingy flat in Kensington, a place that I rarely stayed in if I could help it.  After five-star hotel rooms, it made me feel shabby.

The end of another mission, I was on my way home, the underground, a bus, and then a walk.

It was late.

People were spilling out of the pub after the last drinks.  Most in good spirits, others slightly more boisterous.

A loud-mouthed chap bumped into me, the sort who had one too many, and was ready to take on all comers.

He turned on me, “Watch where you’re going, you fool.”

Two of his friends dragged him away.  He shrugged them off, squared up.

I punched him hard, in the stomach, and he fell backwards onto the ground.  I looked at his two friends.  “Take him home before someone makes mincemeat out of him.”

They grabbed his arms, lifted him off the ground and took him away.

Out of the corner of my eye, I could see a woman, early thirties, quite attractive, but very, very drunk.  She staggered from the bar, bumped into me, and finished up sitting on the side of the road.

I looked around to see where her friends were.  The exodus from the pub was over and the few nearby were leaving to go home.

She was alone, drunk, and by the look of her, unable to move.

I sat beside her.  “Where are your friends?”

“Dunno.”

“You need help?”

She looked up, and sideways at me.  She didn’t look the sort who would get in this state.  Or maybe she was, I was a terrible judge of women.

“Who are you?” she asked.

“Nobody.”  I was exactly how I felt.

“Well Mr Nobody, I’m drunk, and I don’t care.  Just leave me here to rot.”

She put her head back between her knees, and it looked to me she was trying to stop the spinning sensation in her head.

Been there before, and it’s not a good feeling.

“Where are your friends?” I asked again.

“Got none.”

“Perhaps I should take you home.”

“I have no home.”

“You don’t look like a homeless person.  If I’m not mistaken, those shoes are worth more than my weekly salary.”  I’d seen them advertised, in the airline magazine, don’t ask me why the ad caught my attention.

She lifted her head and looked at me again.  “You a smart fucking arse are you?”

“I have my moments.”

“Have them somewhere else.”

She rested her head against my shoulder.  We were the only two left in the street, and suddenly in darkness when the proprietor turned off the outside lights.

“Take me home,” she said suddenly.

“Where is your place?”

“Don’t have one.  Take me to your place.”

“You won’t like it.”

“I’m drunk.  What’s not to like until tomorrow.”

I helped her to her feet.  “You have a name?”

“Charlotte.”

The wedding was in a small church.  We had been away for a weekend in the country, somewhere in the Cotswolds, and found this idyllic spot.  Graves going back to the dawn of time, a beautiful garden tended by the vicar and his wife, an astonishing vista over hills and down dales.

On a spring afternoon with the sun, the flowers, and the peacefulness of the country.

I had two people at the wedding, the best man, Bradley, and my boss, Watkins.

Charlotte had her sisters Melissa and Isobel, and Isobel’s husband Giovanni, and their daughter Felicity.

And one more person who was as mysterious as she was attractive, a rather interesting combination as she was well over retirement age.  She arrived late and left early.

Aunt Agatha.

She looked me up and down with what I’d call a withering look.  “There’s more to you than meets the eye,” she said enigmatically.

“Likewise I’m sure,” I said.  It earned me an elbow in the ribs from Charlotte.  It was clear she feared this woman.

“Why did you come,” Charlotte asked.

“You know why.”

Agatha looked at me.  “I like you.  Take care of my granddaughter.  You do not want me for an enemy.”

OK, now she officially scared me.

She thrust a cheque into my hand, smiled, and left.

“Who is she,” I asked after we watched her depart.

“Certainly not my fairy godmother.”

Charlotte never mentioned her again.

Zurich in summer, not exactly my favourite place.

Instead of going to visit her sister Isobel, we stayed at a hotel in Beethovenstrasse and Isobel and Felicity came to us.  Her husband was not with her this time.

Felicity was three or four and looked very much like her mother.  She also looked very much like Charlotte, and I’d remarked on it once before and it received a sharp rebuke.

We’d been twice before, and rather than talk to her sister, Charlotte spent her time with Felicity, and they were, together, like old friends.  For so few visits they had a remarkable rapport.

I had not broached the subject of children with Charlotte, not after one such discussion where she had said she had no desire to be a mother.  It had not been a subject before and wasn’t once since.

Perhaps like all Aunts, she liked the idea of playing with a child for a while and then give it back.

Felicity was curious as to who I was, but never ventured too close.  I believed a child could sense the evil in adults and had seen through my facade of friendliness.  We were never close.

But…

This time, when observing the two together, something quite out of left field popped into my head.  It was not possible, not by any stretch of the imagination, but I thought she looked like my mother.

And Charlotte had seen me looking in their direction.  “You seem distracted,” she said.

“I was just remembering my mother.  Odd moment, haven’t done so for a very long time.”

“Why now?”  I think she had a look of concern on her face.

“Her birthday, I guess,” I said, the first excuse I could think of.

Another look and I was wrong.  She looked like Isobel or Charlotte, or if I wanted to believe it possible, Melissa too.

I was crying, tears streaming down my face.

I was in pain, searing pain from my lower back stretching down into my legs, and I was barely able to breathe.

It was like coming up for air.

It was like Snow White bringing Prince Charming back to life.  I could feel what I thought was a gentle kiss and tears dropping on my cheeks, and when I opened my eyes, I saw Charlotte slowly lifting her head, a hand gently stroking the hair off my forehead.

And in a very soft voice, she said, “Hi.”

I could not speak, but I think I smiled.  It was the girl with the imperfection in her right eye.  Everything fell into place, and I knew, in that instant that we were irrevocably meant to be together.

“Welcome back.”

© Charles Heath 2016-2019

onelastlookcoverfinal2

“What Sets Us Apart”, a mystery with a twist

David is a man troubled by a past he is trying to forget.

Susan is rebelling against a life of privilege and an exasperated mother who holds a secret that will determine her daughter’s destiny.

They are two people brought together by chance. Or was it?

When Susan discovers her mother’s secret, she goes in search of the truth that has been hidden from her since the day she was born.

When David realizes her absence is more than the usual cooling off after another heated argument, he finds himself being slowly drawn back into his former world of deceit and lies.

Then, back with his former employers, David quickly discovers nothing is what it seems as he embarks on a dangerous mission to find Susan before he loses her forever.

Find the kindle version on Amazon here:  http://amzn.to/2Eryfth

whatsetscover

365 Days of writing, 2026 – 66/67

Days 66 and 67 – Writing exercise

Take a moment in your past, and turn yourself into a character and express your feelings about it

Some things happen that happen for a reason, even though at the time we do not understand the why, only that the result was not what we expected.

Sometimes that is a negative, and causes pause for thought the next time it happens.  Or it is a positive and sends us in a direction that is borne out of experience.

I am by nature an introvert, the sort of person who keeps to himself.  I learned the hard way to mind my own business and not interfere.  The physical scars had healed, but the mental scars are much harder to recover from.

School taught me that trust is not given freely and that it has to be earned.  Of course, the hurdles to get there are often almost insurmountable, but in the end, you learn one of life’s very valuable lessons.

When I graduated from school, not exactly at the top of the class, not the bottom, but it was enough for me to realise I was not suitable material for college or university.  That being the csse my choices were limited.

Stay on the farm and work alongside my father and some of my brothers and sisters, find a job in town, like a storeman at the hardware; or a general hand in one of the fast food outlets. 

Then there was the factory, where eventually all of us, without any schooling, ended up. It was tedious and back-breaking work, but no one questioned your past, your education, or your work ethic.

It was like the army.  You just slotted in and did your bit and didn’t let anyone down.  It suited me, I didn’t have to mix, and I was left alone, even by those who were from school and definitely not my friends.

That took care of the days.

Then there was Friday night at the bar, a rowdy place with everyone having what might be called a good time for some, and for others, a little sport. 

It could get rough; some of those who drank too much became violent, but mostly you were happy, had dinner, a few drinks, shot pool, talked about everything and nothing and then went home.

At first, I avoided it.  I had been drunk before, but that was at home, the typical I’m going to try everything once, and it wasn’t a good experience.  Seeing others so, without inhibitions or quick to temper, your night could very easily end up in the emergency ward at the hospital.

I’d been there a few times when my brothers got on the wrong end of the argument.  That and a night in the sheriff’s cells for drunk and disorderly.  Once was enough, if you learned the lesson.  Quite a few didn’t.

So, having avoided it long enough, I agreed to go with a couple of other chaps with a similar reluctance.  We had been the guys the football jocks beat up on because they could.

Of course, in the year after leaving school and working at home until I couldn’t take my father or eldest brother riding me, I learned how to defend myself.  It was something I should have done at school, but couldn’t.  I needed money, and no one at home would pay. 

Going to work elsewhere, I quickly discovered, gave me independence and the ability to begin living my own life, mistakes and all.

Joe’s Bar and Grill was in a huge barn at the edge of town on the main road out.  It had been there as long as anyone could remember, as far back as the days when the railway arrived, and the ranchers could send their cattle on.

One of those places where the country met the rail head, cattle going out and people coming in.  For a while, it drove the town into a city.

The cowboys would stay until the money ran out, and then everything went back to normal.  In between times, the townsfolk, what was left of them, spent Friday night, the traditional end of the working week, letting their hair down, and Saturdays, where families celebrated together in a more convivial atmosphere.

Friday night was where it all happened.  The night wore on, and the drinks were flowing, which started off noisy and sometimes turned ugly.  It’s why the deputies were on hand to make sure it didn’t get out of hand. That was the theory.

Alex, Will and I, with a name like Ken, the three musketeers, had all landed jobs at the factory.  We didn’t work together, but we all met up at breaks.  We kept out of everyone’s line of sight and did our jobs.

It was Alex’s idea that we go.  Have a few drinks, see who was there and who wasn’t, and if truth be known, Alex was looking for Lola.

That last year of school, he had a thing for her, but she was more interested in the athletic types, and I could have told him he was wasting his time.  But the lovelorn will not accept advice readily, and he came to grief.  When he asked her to be his date at the prom, she just laughed at him.

Will and I knew better than to waste our time.  Of course, we were not immune to those first pangs of romance.  I dabbled, asking oblique questions of what I thought was an exile from the mean girls, Lizzie, but discovered quickly she was unavailable.

Fair enough.  I had the sense to walk away.

I’d since learned that her aspirations for college had run aground her parents’ end of downsizing, and left with the same opportunities as most who found themselves on the unemployment line.

There seemed to be more and more of these days, along with the shuttering of stores on the main street. 

And despite everything that had happened, and the likelihood of what might happen, we arrived, parked the truck, got out and surveyed the scene before us.  Crowded, noisy, and a powder keg waiting to explode.

I counted half a dozen cruisers and ten deputies I could see, hanging back, waiting.

Four pick-ups in a convoy arrived and parked out front.  Spaces reserved for the management and VIPs.

“No show without punch, eh?” Alex muttered.

One might have regarded Sam Blackstone as a VIP, but his father was some big shot back east, and Sam somehow believed her was the prodigal son.

He made the big league, got drunk after his first big game, tripped and fell down the stairs, and now had a permanent limp and nothing to brag about

Other than the big shot father who never came home.

But that didn’t stop him from being the leader of a bunch of entitled guys who basically did what they pleased.

We avoided them.

“We shouldn’t be doing this,” Will said.  “Remember the last time?”

I think we would.  We got our asses handed to us.

“It’s different this time.”  Alex wasn’t going to forgive or forget.  He attended the same self-defence classes that the three of us did.

Will and I were there for self-defence, Alex was there for vengeance.

“I think Will’s right,” I said, hoping to save him from himself, but judging by his posture and expression, reasoning was out.

“You go.  I can do this.”

Will and I looked at each other and shrugged. Alex, on his own, would only get so far.  As the three musketeers, we might just get out alive.

Joe’s Bar and Grill was Sam’s home turf.

Four trucks, one boss and seven mates.  I’d heard about their antics, second-hand from my sister, Will
Eileen, whose best friend was Lizzie, yes, that Lizzie, whose older brother was a deputy.

Well, it is now back to being a small town where everyone knew everyone else.

Last advice, Sam had finally worn out the new Sheriff’s patience. Times had changed, the old sheriff got voted out after a corruption charge was brought against him, not proven, but the local folks figured it was time for a change.

The memo hadn’t reached Sam.  Yet.

Alex started walking towards the front entrance.  I shrugged.  “In for a penny…”

Will just sighed.  “This is going to be fun.”  The way he said it, I knew what he meant.  This was going yo be anything but fun.

Dodger, the nickname we gave to the guy on the door, was from the fact that when the fighting started, he disappeared.

“You guys ain’t been here for a while.”

“Nope,” I said.  “And judging by the noise, nothing’s changed much.”

“We’ve got a bucking bull.”

He was taking us literally.  On Dodger could do that.  The other door guys would have just ignored us.

“I’ll be sure to check it out,” I said.

Past the threshold, it was wall-to-wall people.  Such was Joe’s fame that people came from far and wide.

In front of us, the bar, which stretched from the front to the back, was double-sided.  One side served the pool tables and the bucking bulls, the other tables, and further back, the dance floor.

A gun could go off, and no one would hear it.

“I’ll get a table, you two get drinks and try to stay out of trouble.”  He disappeared into the fog

We went to the bar.  Men served the drinks, the girls delivered them to the tables, and there was also a mix of ‘get your own’, or ‘have it served at your table’, giving the girls a tip.

I heard a rumour that Lizzie and her friends worked as waitresses on Friday and Saturday, the tips adding nicely to their bank accounts, despite the unruly and sometimes bad behaviour of certain customers.

I got the first round, and we went into the fog, and minutes later stumbled into the table where Will was sitting.  A waitress, not Lizzie, came past and slopped a wet rag over the table top and kept going.

We sat.

“Where did Sam go?  I didn’t see him when I was at the bar.”  Will might have seen him on his way to the table.  A shake of the head said no.

“What do you want to know for?”

“So trouble does sneak up on us.”

I was not sure why I was so worried.  We were too small for him to be bothered with.

And by the time an hour had passed, we were approaching the bewitching hour, so named because it was about the time those who had too much and were supposed to be elected by management started to arc up.

The crowd had thinned, but there were still a lot of people there.  The line dancing was getting a little erratic as the booze started to take effect, and already one skirmish had broken out.

The deputies appeared and escorted the guilty to the van and taken to the drunk tank.  It was a sombre warning to others

We had shifted to the bar, and that’s when I saw Lizzie.  She came back and was not far from us.  She looked tired and oddly dishevelled.

And angry.

I slid off my chair and went over.

When she turned, I said, “How are you, Liz?”

I remembered just in time that she hated being called Lizzie.

“How do you think I am?”  It exploded out of her.  Something had happened.

“I know you don’t like me, but that’s a bit strong when a ‘I’m fine, piss off’ spoken politely would have sufficed.”

I turned to go back.

“Sorry.”

I stopped and turned. 

“I’m having a bad night,” she said, sadly, like it was a permanent fact.

“Wouldn’t that be every Friday?”

“No, only those when Sam and his thugs come.  Thinks he owns the place, and that we are at his beck and call.”

“Be worth the tips.”

She snorted.  “Insults, maybe.  Not money.  Not anything.”

“You’re his gopher?”

“And Sally, and Brigitte.  I don’t think there’s a girl under 25 he hasn’t had his way with.  But it’s our own fault for believing the scumbag.”

The barkeep put a tray of drinks on the bar.

“Gotta go.  Ken, isn’t it?  You dodged a bullet, Ken.  I’m not worthy of anything or anyone any more.”

A last look, this one carrying so much despair it nearly brought me to tears.

I had hoped I would miss Sam, but if he was the one who had broken Lizzie, then I was going to make it my mission to break him.

A little more than he already was.

He was down the back, in a booth, flanked by thugs and sitting with three fresh faces, girls who had not experienced the Sam charm offensive.

I watched Lizzie drop the tray on the table, knocking over a bottle, and everyone watching it roll onto his lap.

Silence.  In this corner.

She apologised.  He picked up the bottle and looked like he was going to throw it at her. She flinched in a way I knew this was not the first time, and that was when I said, “You do that, Sam, and it’ll be the last thing you do tonight.”

Three things happened.

First, the two thugs and the two girls got out from behind the table faster than I’d ever seen anyone move, the girls moving away, the thugs positioning themselves so I couldn’t run.

My intention wasn’t to run, but always have an exit just in case.  I picked one.

I motioned for Lizzie to step behind me, and after a moment’s hesitation, she did.  I thought Sam might stop her, but he didn’t.  He had a bigger fish to try.

Second, four of his other thugs came running, but in the crowd, which seemed to close up, it was hard to make headway.  Then Will and Alex appeared, and with two quick and subtle moments, the four were on the floor writhing in agony.

They had simply used their momentum and excess weight, and the degree of intoxication against them.  They took up positions near the two thugs who had been sitting at the table.

Third, the crowd closed in, making it impossible for the deputies to get through.  There was something in the air, and it wasn’t support for Sam.

Not that he would have seen it that way.

Slowly, and very deliberately, he slid out from behind the table and stood.  There was no doubt he was an impressive size, six inches taller and fifty pounds or more.

Enough to scare anyone into submission.

Except he had one weakness.

He came around to the front of the table and leaned against it, shaking his head.

“Little Kenny.  My, my, you’re a bit out of your depth now, aren’t you?  This thing you had for Lizzie now gets you the mother of all lessons in when to mind your own business.”

Let the man talk.  Talk is cheap.  Talk gives confidence, because he’s trying to build a wall, one that he thinks will protect him and make him stronger.

A hush came over the whole building.  The deputies were coming.  This confrontation wasn’t going to last more than a few minutes.

“I see you’ve got your girlfriends with you.”

He was taunting Alex and Will.  They were not going to be taunted, not after putting down four of his thugs. He’d missed that sideshow.

Sam still had the bottle in his hand.  I knew what he was going to do with it.  He had a hunting knife on him, but that would be too clean.  A jagged-edged bottle that could do some damage.

“Let’s take this outside.”

Better that way.  He wouldn’t get banned, and he could shift the blame to me for starting it.

“You can leave any time you like, Sam.  I have a Bud to finish before I go.”

Another shake of the head, then he smashed the top of the empty bottle in his hand, exposing a jagged edge that would leave a nasty cut.

Eyes darting left and right, he launched himself at me with the bottle, heading straight for my neck.  Three seconds, a swift dodge to the left, and a foot perfectly placed where they glued his leg back together.

Everyone heard it crack, everyone heard the scream, and then everyone heard the bull elephant hit the floor and go very still.

Then the sheriff and two deputies burst through the crowd.  No one had said a word.  Nothing.  His friends didn’t move.  Alex had one, Will had the other, and they let them go just as the deputies entered the bull ring.

The two deputies went over to Sam.  The sheriff looked around the crowd, a sea of stunned faces.

“What happened here?”

Thirty seconds before you’ve called out, “Sam was about to throw a bottle at the waitress.”

Another, “He does it all the time.  Hurts them, they all laugh like it’s nothing.”

Another, ” His friends are just as bad.”   Suddenly, the crowd thrust them forward as they tried to blend in.  Alex and Will had disappeared.

“Again, what happened?”  He was sensing a shift in mood.

“That fella told him not to throw the bottle.”

Fingers pointed at me.  I was standing back from but alongside Sam, who still hadn’t moved.  The two deputies were struggling to turn him over.  One was calling for an ambulance.

The sheriff and I knew each other.  I had to bail my brothers out of jail a few times.  I told him ai was the quiet one.  Perhaps that might change very soon.

Behind me, I felt a hand slip into mine and a gentle squeeze.  Then, as quickly as it had happened, it was gone.

“Ken, isn’t it?”

“Sheriff.”

“You told Sam not to throw the bottle?”

“At the waitress, yeah.  Apparently, he’s done it before.  Also physically assaults them, sir.”

“You seem to have done it?”

“I saw the end result of his ministrations, sir.  I know his reputation, sir.  I’ve seen him doing it at school.  Under-age girls.  His parents but them off.”

“Hearsay, Ken.”

A girl’s voice yelled out.  It’s the truth, Sheriff.  It’s you gutless bastards that enabled him.”

The sheriff tried to see who it was, but the crowd closed ranks.

Another deputy came, a bigger man, and together the three rolled him over.  The jagged bottle was sticking out of his upper leg, a bloody mess.

One deputy vomited.  Another pulled off his belt and made a tourniquet.  The other was screaming at dispatch to get an ambulance.

The sheriff looked at me.  “You do this?”

A voice yelled out, “But he did not.”

A ripple of agreement went through the crowd.

He picked one.  “What happened?”

“Sam was leaning against the table.  They were talking.  Then, suddenly, he launched himself at Ken.  Then that same instant, his leg gave out, the gummy one he wrecked being drunk and stupid.  Like tonight.  Went down like the sack shit he is and stabbed himself.  Had he not, Ken would be dead.”

“Anyone else?”

“Smashed the bottle himself, same one he was going to chuck at the girl.  Poetic justice, it’s called.”

The sheriff couldn’t quite put the pieces together to make a believable story.

His eyes stopped on one of the thugs.  “What’s your version?”

“It’s the only version.  His leg gave out, and he stabbed himself.  Fucking fool.”

“You sign a statement to that effect?”

“Everyone will.  He’s terrorised this place, this town, for long enough.”

The sheriff sighed.  “Everyone, go sit down. This is going to be a long night.”

Just then, the ambulance arrived, and the crowd opened up to let the paramedics through.  “Don’t you five go anywhere.”  He pointed at me, the two thugs, Lizzie and the first witness.  He assigned a deputy to watch us after we were taken to a corner with several lounges.

Liz sat next to me.

“Thank you.  You didn’t have to.”

“You should be able to work here and not be afraid. I did what any decent person would.”

“That’s your first mistake.  There ain’t no decent people.  Except maybe you?”

“We’re all tarred with the same brush.  You told mr that.”

“I said a lot of shit back then, cause I didn’t know any better.  You’re not like them.”

“Not if you take in what happened here.”

“That’s different.”

“More violence doesn’t stop violence.  It just makes matters worse.”

“Or better.  You’ll see.”

Sam dies in the ambulance on the way to the hospital. 

The sheriff received 345 witness statements that all said the same thing.  Sam was attacking me, unprovoked, his leg gave out, and he killed himself.  The medical examiner called it death by misadventure. 

No one was to blame.

Except his father and brothers turned up at the family ranch, accusing me of killing Sam, at which my father and brothers fell over laughing so hard.

When they refused to leave, my father got his shotgun, called them trespassers and shot at them. A rather expensive car was severely damaged during the process.

The sheriff was told that when Sam’s father came to him with sworn statements that I was the murderer, he tore them up and said if he wanted to press charges, Sam would be posthumously charged with 15 counts of rape and over a thousand charges of sexual assault, grievous bodily harm, attempted murder, kidnapping, and bribery.

He brought out three boxes of sworn statements and said he was ready to start proceedings today.  All he had to do was give the word, and the press packages would be sent out.

It was no surprise that the father left and never came back.  The two brothers, who thought they would take matters into their own hands, disappeared.

They simply disappeared.

As for Elizabeth, who liked to be called Eliza, let the storm blow through like a prairie wind and one morning turned up at my cabin, at the foot of the hills, in one of the most peaceful places in the county.

She looked radiant.

It had taken a lot to get over the trauma involving Sam.  She was one of those he raped.  It had led to a pregnancy, and after nine months, the baby was stillborn.  It almost killed her, but my mother and her First Nation instincts took her to a healing place and brought her back from what could only be called a very dark place.

She held out her hand, and I took it. Then she said the four words I had been waiting for, “I have come home.”

It was something else I never knew or understood, not until the night I stepped between Sam and Elizabeth.

Our heritage, the ways of my mother’s people, going back into the depths of time, and our affinity with the land and the animals and the spirits.

Things could have turned out very badly that night.

They did not, and for that I would be forever thankful, living in, and surrounded by a world I never knew existed.

©  Charles Heath  2026

The story behind the story: A Case of Working With the Jones Brothers

To write a private detective serial has always been one of the items at the top of my to-do list, though trying to write novels and a serial, as well as a blog, and maintain a social media presence, well, you get the idea.

But I made it happen, from a bunch of episodes I wrote a long, long time ago, used these to start it, and then continue on, then as now, never having much of an idea where it was going to end up, or how long it would take to tell the story.

That, I think is the joy of ad hoc writing, even you, as the author, have as much of an idea of where it’s going as the reader does.

It’s basically been in the mill since 1990, and although I finished it last year, it looks like the beginning to end will have taken exactly 30 years.  Had you asked me 30 years ago if I’d ever get it finished, the answer would be maybe?

My private detective, Harry Walthenson

I’d like to say he’s from that great literary mould of Sam Spade, or Mickey Spillane, or Phillip Marlow, but he’s not.

But I’ve watched Humphrey Bogart play Sam Spade with much interest, and modelled Harry and his office on it.  Similarly, I’ve watched Robert Micham play Phillip Marlow with great panache, if not detachment, and added a bit of him to the mix.

Other characters come into play, and all of them, no matter what period they’re from, always seem larger than life.  I’m not above stealing a little of Mary Astor, Peter Lorre or Sidney Greenstreet, to breathe life into beguiling women and dangerous men alike.

Then there’s the title, like

The Case of the Unintentional Mummy – this has so many meanings in so many contexts, though I imagine that back in Hollywood in the ’30s and ’40s, this would be excellent fodder for Abbott and Costello

The Case of the Three-Legged Dog – Yes, I suspect there may be a few real-life dogs with three legs, but this plot would involve something more sinister.  And if made out of plaster, yes, they’re always something else inside.

But for mine, to begin with, it was “The Case of the …”, because I had no idea what the case was going to be about, well, I did, but not specifically.

Then I liked the idea of calling it “The Case of the Brothers’ Revenge” because I began to have a notion there was a brother no one knew about, but that’s stuff for other stories, not mine, so then it went the way of the others.

Now it’s called ‘A Case of Working With the Jones Brothers’, finished the first three drafts, and I am at the editor for the last reading.

I have high hopes of publishing it mid 2026.  It even has a cover.

PIWalthJones1