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Backlash
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Table of Contents
Recent Titles by Nick Oldham
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
Monday
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Tuesday
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Wednesday
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Thursday
Chapter Twenty-Three
Friday
Chapter Twenty-Four
Epilogue
Recent Titles by Nick Oldham
THE LAST BIG JOB
NIGHTMARE CITY
ONE DEAD WITNESS
A TIME FOR JUSTICE
BACKLASH
Nick Oldham
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2001 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9-15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
eBook edition first published in 2013 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Copyright © 2001 by Nick Oldham
The right of Nick Oldham to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Oldham, Nick, 1956– Backlash
1. Police
2. Detective and mystery stories
I. Title
823.9'14 [F]
ISBN-13: 978-1-4483-0078-5 (epub)
ISBN 978-0-7278-5700-2
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This eBook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
To Sarah and Philip
Prologue
Wilmslow, Cheshire, England
It was time to kill again.
David Gill placed the newspaper down across his lap and took a deep breath to steady his excitement and anticipation. He could feel the tension building up to bursting point in his body; like an enraged beast, it tore through his veins. Uncontrollable, but wonderful. Demanding to be released.
With tingling fingers he folded the newspaper neatly, slotting the sections back inside each other as though it had only just dropped through the front door. He put the heavy broadsheet down on the coffee table, aligning it carefully with the edge of the piece of furniture.
He flexed his fingers and eased a pair of disposable gloves onto his hands, pulling them up his wrists and over his cuffs. After this he adjusted the elasticated shower cap on his head, fitting it halfway over his ears, totally covering his short cropped hair. He wriggled his toes in the disposable paper shoes he wore over his feet and shook his head, uttering a snort of a laugh and grinning sardonically as he thought, ‘Bloody forensics . . . the trouble you have to go to . . .’ He had a light feeling in his chest and, as he stood up, he shook himself and shrugged his shoulders inside his neat blue overalls. He was ready to perform.
Gill went out of the living room, walked down the short hallway, crept upstairs to the landing and slid quietly to the closed bathroom door. The only sound he could hear was that of his own blood pounding through his head, driven by a heart working in overdrive. He stood stock still by the door, head cocked, brow furrowed, as if listening for something. Then he knocked lightly. Politely even.
There was no response – even though he knew there was someone inside.
He knew because he had put them there.
‘Hello. It’s me. Mind if I come in?’ he called brightly through the door, awaiting a reply which did not come. Not that he truly expected to hear one. The person in the bathroom was in no position to make one. Gill was just playing a silly old game. His idea of a little joke. Designed to lighten and brighten up a heavy – very heavy – situation. ‘Well,’ he announced, ‘here I come anyway – ready or not, whether you’re decent or you’re not.’
Gill gripped the door handle and, for effect, pushed it down with excruciating slowness, just to pile on the agony. He also cackled maniacally, like a pantomime witch. He was really beginning to enjoy himself now.
The woman in the bathroom could not have responded in any way to Gill’s original question even if she had wanted to. Her whole head had been encased in parcel tape, with the exception of a slit for her eyes and a gap underneath her nose to allow her to breathe. The tape covered her mouth and had been looped under her chin and back round the top of her head so that it was impossible for her to move her jaw at all. She was quite a small woman and had been laid full length in the bath, naked. Her hands had been bound behind her by the same type of tape, which had also been wrapped round her legs from her thighs to her ankles. She was quivering with fear, her whole body shaking.
Her name was Lucinda Graveson. She was a lawyer.
The bathroom door creaked open, inch by inch. Gill curled his fingers round the edge of it, cackled again, and then showed his face and stepped fully into the room. ‘How are you doing?’ he asked her gently, a smile of sadness playing on his lips. ‘Oops, sorry . . . can’t speak, can we? All trussed up and nowhere to go. How inconvenient for you. Still . . . it’s for the best . . . now, what shall we do here?’
Lucinda Graveson began to squirm in a valiant, but ultimately useless attempt to free herself. Muted, terrified noises emanated from somewhere deep inside her throat. She was exhausted from trying and the effort subsided until she once more lay quivering and whimpering. Gill gazed at her indulgently, shaking his head.
‘I wouldn’t bother,’ he advised her.
Gill had previously arranged his tools in a line along a folded towel on top of the toilet cistern. He turned away from Graveson and made a show of inspecting the shiny instruments: he counted them, touched them, picked them up and held them up to the light, assessed them, hummed and hawed, muttered a few words such as, ‘Nice . . . lovely piece . . . wow!’ and replaced them in their neat row. He twiddled his fingers with mock indecision and then made a selection.
A scalpel. Long. Sparkling. The blade honed to perfection. Sharper than a razor.
He spun back to Graveson and showed her the scalpel. A gurgle of despair churned inside the lawyer’s guts as, at last and inevitably, she lost bowel control.
Gill’s shoulders sagged impatiently. ‘Bloody hell, Lucinda – why did you have to go and do that? You’ve gone and shit yourself. Ah well, never mind, let’s get you all cleaned up, shall we? You see, the problem is that blood and shit don’t really mix well.’
He replaced the scalpel on the towel and reached over the bath for the showe
r head fitted above the taps. It was a power shower and he went to work, whistling as he sprayed away the runny faeces down the plughole, constantly adjusting the temperature control so it was just right. Not too hot, not too cold.
‘There we are, done and dusted,’ he declared eventually. He slotted the shower head into its wall fitting and turned it off. ‘Now,’ he said, wagging a finger, ‘you’re not going to do anything like that again, are you, Lucinda?’
She shook her head.
‘Good, that’s good.’
Gill reached for the scalpel again, chatting brightly. ‘I’ve just been reading the Sunday Times downstairs. God, it’s a weight, you know? I wonder what the paper boys think about Sunday papers, they’re so heavy now . . . and Saturday’s too . . .I mean, The Times on Saturday is almost as bulky as the Sunday one!’ He spun round with a flourish, scalpel in hand, making Graveson cringe and cower. He leaned over her and she tried to contort herself away. ‘Don’t bother struggling – you’ll only make things worse for yourself . . . and anyway, what do you think I’m going to do with this little thing?’ He held the scalpel up right in front of his face and drew it towards his nose, making his eyes cross. ‘D’you think I’m going to kill you with it? Don’t be an arse. Now relax, Lucinda . . . let things progress.’
Gill’s hand hovered a few inches over Graveson’s face, the scalpel pointing downwards. He placed the tip of the blade into the parcel tape wrapped over her mouth, then he drew the scalpel along the tape, cutting a two-inch slit in it which allowed Lucinda a tiny fraction of movement of the lips. ‘There – see – didn’t hurt a bit, did it?’ Gill squatted down onto his haunches by the side of the bath and patted her on the head. He stood up and crossed to the toilet, positioning the scalpel carefully back into its allotted place on the towel.
A murmur came from the slit in the tape that was now Lucinda Graveson’s mouth.
‘Sorry – what? Didn’t quite catch that one.’ Once more Gill leaned over her, his ear a couple of inches above the slit. ‘Say it again.’
‘Why?’ Graveson was able to hiss. ‘Why?’
Gill laughed. He had known this would be the question, had been anticipating it. It was the one they all asked. Why me? Why fucking me? Of all the unfortunate people in the world, why does it have to be me? Gill scratched his head. ‘You mean you don’t know? Hmm? Let me think now. I’d say it’s because you are one of the causes of the problem, Lucinda Graveson, LLB, and whatever other stupid, petty, meaningless qualifications you possess. The problem being society and the way tradition has been stepped on and crushed and brushed under the carpet as though it’s dirt.’ His voice began to rise as he spoke, becoming an hysterical whine. ‘The way the ordained order of things has been turned upside down. The tail wagging the dog, that’s what!’ He slammed an angry fist hard into the bathroom door, hurting himself. ‘That’s why,’ he said, shaking his hand, ‘that’s the fucking reason why! I’m just doing my bit – my little, inconsequential bit – to try and rectify all this injustice.’
He stopped suddenly, his face red and swollen with anger.
Graveson was sobbing underneath the parcel tape.
Gill got a grip on himself, calmed down and shook his head with a little chuckle, pleased that he could laugh at himself. Able to keep a sense of humour and perspective while around him the whole world had gone completely mad. ‘Sorry, sorry about that,’ he said, apologising profusely, even blushing a little. ‘High horse galloping merrily away. Not good to lose it . . . so, what was the question. Oh, yes, why? That’s why. What you are and what you do and what you represent, Lucinda. And your colour doesn’t help much, admittedly. Happy now?’ He placed the palm of his right hand over his heart. ‘Heck: beating like an express train. Better calm down. Don’t want to lose my sense of reason, do I?’
He took a few deep, steadying breaths.
‘That’s better . . . now, back to you, Lucinda Graveson. What am I going to do here? What will the police think when they find you? What blind alley should I send them whizzing down, incompetent bunch of bastards? Slaughtered by a jealous lover? You know the kind of thing – tits hacked off, something stuffed up inside you; make ’em think you’re really a lesbian. That would send everyone into a real tizz, wouldn’t it? – for you to be revealed as a lesbo, even though I know you’re as straight as a die. Or how about battered to death in a frenzied attack after discovering a burglar in your house? How should I make this look? Ho-hum, decisions, decisions.’
Gill turned to the assortment of tools on the towel. He selected a ball hammer, testing it for weight and effectiveness by smacking it gently into the palm of his left hand. He stopped and looked at the woman in the bath. He sniffed. ‘Actually I quite fancy giving you a “Yorkshire Ripper”.’
He said it as though he was about to give Lucinda Graveson a cut and blow dry.
Over the last six months, Gill had studied Lucinda Graveson’s habits quite closely. He knew enough to switch off all her house lights at 11.30 p.m. This chore done, Gill sat behind drawn curtains in the darkened house for another forty-five minutes, looking out through a narrow gap at the street outside.
He used the time for some deep reflection about the future. Making plans, deciding the way forwards.
At 12.15 a.m. he went into the kitchen and stepped carefully over the body of Lucinda Graveson’s husband before letting himself out of the back door. He edged to the front corner of the house and stayed there for a while.
Nothing moved. Few lights shone in the surrounding properties. It was one of those neighbourhoods – weren’t most? Gill pondered depressingly – in which everyone kept themselves to themselves, kept their noses out of other people’s business and curled up in their alarm-protected houses. It was the sort of community that, directly and indirectly, people like Lucinda Graveson contributed to, Gill firmly and obsessively believed.
Five minutes more he waited. Still no movement. When he was certain there was nothing to worry about, he flicked the hood of his coat over his head and trotted confidently down the drive, past Lucinda’s natty little MGF and her husband’s BMW.
Gill walked down the avenue and criss-crossed his way through a large good-class housing estate until he reached a main road. In a few more minutes he was at his motorcycle, which he had left secreted between two units on a crappy industrial estate. Over his shoulder he carried the black plastic bin liner which contained the protective clothing he had worn and the tools he had used while committing his crimes, including the electric-shock baton with which he had subdued the Gravesons before killing them. As he stuffed the bag into one of the panniers he reminded himself to check the baton because he’d had to give Mr Graveson a second blast with it when the first one hadn’t worked. Maybe there was a loose connection in it somewhere, he thought. From the back box he removed his full-face helmet and pulled it on over his head and mounted the big bike.
He was aware of the possibility of getting pulled up by the police on his journey, but the chances of it happening were remote and even if it did happen there was little chance of the panniers being searched. Gill acknowledged the risk, but was prepared to take it because he knew that the hundred per cent safe disposal of the clothing was guaranteed at home. In this game, the gauntlet sometimes had to be run.
The machine fired up first time, its engine ticked over smoothly.
Within minutes he was on the motorway, accelerating easily up to his cruising speed of eighty. Just about right to make good progress but not too fast to attract any unwelcome attention. Less than an hour later his bike was parked up in a secure garage and Gill was walking into his flat.
He chilled out, wound down for a while, wrote things up and glanced over some old articles. He bathed in a little self glory and patted himself on the back, wondering how his latest exploit would hit the news. While relaxing he lifted a few weights, did fifty press-ups, a hundred sit-ups and 5,000 metres on his rower, just to keep himself buzzing.
Just before 4 a.m., he left the fla
t to make his way home.
The urge to kill again was already permeating through his soul.
Miami, Florida, US
The bomber – his name was unknown – had planted nineteen bombs and spent six years making the world’s most prestigious law-enforcement agency look stupid.
The first bomb had been a low-key affair – as bombs go. It had been placed in any bomber’s favourite location, a bar. This one was in San Francisco and was frequented by the gay community. An easy target on a steamy Friday evening in June when the place was heaving with vest-clad, muscle-bound bodies. The surprise was that it only ripped the guts out of three people, those unfortunate ones seated on the bench under which the innocuous looking sports bag containing the bomb had been placed. Four others were maimed, another dozen injured.
The bomb had been a try-out. It had worked.
Each subsequent bomb was better, more powerful, more deadly and sophisticated than its predecessor. The death toll could easily have passed one hundred, but twenty-four it was, with two more in comas from which they would be unlikely to surface, eight wheelchair bound and another forty with lost limbs.
The FBI had reacted predictably, throwing the bulk of their resources at the numerous right-wing terrorist groups which were sprouting up across America like cancerous tumours. They did their best to infiltrate this movement – fast becoming very clever and more security-conscious where law enforcement tactics were concerned; a movement that had studied, liaised with and learned valuable lessons from other terrorist groups, particularly the successful European ones, such as the Provisional IRA, and had begun to operate in self-contained units, making it virtually impossible for an outsider such as an undercover officer to penetrate successfully.
And so the Feds had tried and tried and, humiliatingly, discovered nothing. No hints. No whispers. No names. Not a thing. The bomber remained nameless, faceless, untouchable, able to conduct a campaign of terror with impunity across the country, wreaking havoc, misery, mayhem and death, inducing fear into his targets.