Storms
STORMS
A NOVEL
BY DAVID MENON
Copyright 2014 David Menon. All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any real person, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
This is for Maddie who is the constant in my life … and it’s for all the red shirted men and women I’ve been working with this summer and our extended Squires Gate family. It’s been a blast and I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.
This is also for anyone who’s never been a blue, calm sea but who’s always been a storm.
David was born in Derby, England in 1961 and has lived all over the UK but now he divides his time between Paris, where his partner lives, and the northwest of England. In 2009 he gave up a long career in the airline industry to concentrate on his writing ambitions. He’s now published several books including the series of crime novels featuring Detective Superintendent Jeff Barton that are set in Manchester and the series of Stephanie Marshall mysteries set in Sydney. He’s also created the DCI Sara Hoyland series beginning with Fall from Grace. When he gets any spare time he teaches English to foreign students, mainly Russians, and works part-time for a friendly low fares airline. His other interests include travelling, politics, international current affairs, all the arts of literature, film, TV, theatre and music and he’s a devoted fan of American singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks who he calls the voice of his interior world. He loves Indian food, he likes a gin and tonic that’s heavy on the g and light on the t, plus a glass or three of red wine. Well, it doesn’t make him a bad person.
www.davidmenon.com
www.facebook.com/davidmenoncrimefictionauthor
www.amazon.co.uk
Also by David Menon
Detective Superintendent Jeff Barton series.
- Sorcerer.
- Fireflies
- Storms.
- No Questions Asked, coming early 2015.
DCI Sara Hoyland crime mystery series
- Fall from Grace
- Beautiful Child.
- Best Friend, Worst Enemy.
The Stephanie Marshall mysteries.
- What Happened to Liam?
- Could Max Burley Be a Killer?, coming early 2015.
Other titles
- The Murder in His Past.
- The Wild Heart
- Kind of Woman.
STORMS ONE
Leroy tried to struggle against the restraints. He was sitting at one end of what felt like some kind of bench with his legs straddled either side. There was an ice cold metal pole against his back and a thick metal collar round his neck that prevented him from lowering his head. Something was touching the back of his neck. He couldn’t figure out what it was but it also felt like metal of some kind. His arms had been pulled back and his wrists cuffed tightly to the metal pole although his hands had been forced too far apart to be able to touch and that was causing excruciating pain in his shoulders. His knees were bent and his ankles chained to something behind him. He’d been stripped naked and he was cold. He was really cold. Tape had been placed over his mouth and eyes. He could almost smell his own fear.
Then the man’s voice filled him once more with horror.
It was a voice he didn’t recognise but somehow he knew it was the voice of a white man.
‘You may as well save your strength’ said the man. ‘You’re really going to need it’.
Leroy heard the man step closer and then he lit a cigarette. ‘Face up to it, Leroy. You won’t be getting out of here alive. You’ve come here to die my friend. Or rather you’ve come here for me to execute you. That’s when the fun will start. Well it will for me anyway but for you it might not be so much fun. More like the unbearable torments of hell. You think you control the streets. You think you can take whatever you want and give absolutely nothing back. Well let me tell you, Leroy, it isn’t going to happen anymore because I’m going to pick you all off one by one and teach the Gorton boys a valuable lesson in an eye for an eye’.
The man paused whilst he took a drag on his cigarette. Leroy was breathing rapidly and was totally consumed with terror.
‘Do you know what, Leroy? I was so keen to get down here and fill you in on what’s going to be happening during your last hours on earth that I forgot to bring an ashtray. Still there are always other places to stub your fag out’.
The man grabbed Leroy’s penis, pulled back the foreskin and stubbed his cigarette out on the end. He kept it there grinding the hot tobacco into the sensitive flesh. Leroy struggled once more in his restrained position. He was desperate to get away from the onslaught of sudden pain and could feel himself crying. He tried to scream but the tape across his mouth muffled the sound.
‘Try and get some sleep now, there’s a good boy’ said the man. ‘You’ll need some rest whilst you contemplate your last night here on this earth’.
Leroy was hungry but the need for food and especially water was being savagely repressed by the pain that felt like it was tearing his muscles apart. He’d barely been able to sleep but when his body had given in to the need for some kind of close down he’d immediately woken up again with a start and started crying when he remembered the situation he was in.
It was true that he’d been a pretty bad boy in his time. But the Gorton boys had been his crew. More than that they’d been his family and they’d been his future. He’d beaten people up. He’d beaten up young children who’d disrespected the laws of the Gorton boys. He’d answered them all back and struck fear into their hearts. He’d give anything to be back on those streets now.
Every time he tried to move, even a slight movement of his arms or legs, his body almost seized up with pain. He’d pissed himself. He’d had to. He’d had no choice. He could smell the pool of urine on the floor below him. It was stone cold wherever he was and yet he’d been sweating. It felt as if his legs would snap away from the rest of his body at any moment. His shoulders felt like they were on fire as they struggled to keep his arms fixed in their sockets.
He heard the door open and his body almost went into spasm with fear.
‘So how was your night?’ asked the man. It was the same voice as before. ‘Sorry. That really was a silly question. I’ll shut up and get on with preparing your painful means of death’.
Leroy heard the man walk behind him. Oh Christ what was he going to do to him? He couldn’t help pissing himself again.
‘Oh the waterworks’ said the man. ‘Still, I can’t say I blame you. You must be terrified. Well you should be because this is really going to hurt’.
Leroy started crying. He could feel the tears roll down from underneath the thick tape across his eyes and across his cheeks.
‘I suppose you want your Mum now, don’t you? Well don’t worry. You see I’m filming this whole thing and I’ll be sending a copy of the DVD to your dear, sweet Mummy. The DVD won’t show me of course. I pause the camera when I come into the room. Now, in the best traditions of all executioners I’m going to let you have your final words’.
The man ripped the tape from Leroy’s mouth. Leroy let out a loud scream and was finding it difficult to breathe.
‘It’s a good job nobody can hear you’ said the man. ‘Now, what do you want to say?’
‘Please, man … please don’t do this. I’ll do anything … ‘
‘Did you give any of your victims the right to a final few words? I don’t suppose you did’.
‘I’m … I’m sorry’
‘Oh sorry is a bit late, my friend’.
‘Why are you doing this to me?’
‘Because you and the rest of the Gorton boys have got away with too much for too long’.
‘I’m begging you, man’ Leroy pleaded.
‘Oh this is getting boring!’ said the man wh
o then taped Leroy’s mouth up again. He watched Leroy try to struggle and got great satisfaction from seeing him twist and contort with frustration and terror.
Leroy heard some kind of mechanism twisting behind him and then the cold metal he’d been feeling against the back of his neck began to move forward and force his neck up against the metal collar. He flinched. He was finding it difficult to breathe.
‘Do you know what a garotte is, Leroy? Well you’re strapped to one right now. I turn the wheel at the back here which forces your neck against the metal collar and after about four or five twists it’ll break your neck and you’ll be dead. Each twist will increase the pain you feel and you’ll struggle more and more to breathe. Goodbye Leroy. You could’ve had a truly meaningful life but as it turns out your life was pretty pointless really. Better luck next time. Now here’s the second twist and with it you’re just that little bit closer to death’.
STORMS TWO
Detective Superintendent Jeff Barton was addressing a meeting of the ‘Mothers of the Gorton boys’ in the Gorton area of east Manchester. The group had been formed after a member of the Gorton boys gang, Leroy Patterson, who was only seventeen, had been abducted, murdered, and his body then dumped on the street where he’d lived. The residents wanted to know what the police were doing to catch the killer and were accusing them of neglecting to place all their resources behind the investigation because it was Leroy Patterson, a young black man who nevertheless had an already established record of intimidation and violence.
‘I can assure everyone here that the Greater Manchester police are conducting their enquiries professionally and without any degree of negativity towards the identity of the victim’ said Jeff, emphatically over the loud whispers of discontent. ‘But as I said earlier, one of the reasons why we’re not getting very far with the investigation is the resistance of this community to talk to us’.
An elderly woman stood up and didn’t let her years dampen or moderate her obvious anger. ‘We’re talking to you now! But we don’t get the meaning of talking when it’s not backed up by action’.
‘But that’s precisely why we’re not getting anywhere’ Jeff countered although in a calmer more measured voice than before. He’d dressed himself up in a suit with a shirt and tie instead of his usual preferred attire of leather jacket, chinos and some variety of check pattered shirt. He’d thought it essential to look the part with a community where all the ladies in particular took such care of their appearance. ‘We hit up against a brick wall of antagonism to the police every single time and it makes it very difficult for us to even try and do our job. Leroy Patterson didn’t just disappear off the streets. He left the house of his friend Tyrone Peters at 11.30 on the night of the 17th to walk the quarter of a mile to his own house on Millgate Drive. We know he never made it. But someone must’ve seen something? Someone must’ve heard something that made them go to their window and sneak a look through the curtains? This is a built up area with very little open space and I’m just not prepared to accept that nobody saw or heard anything either then or when his body was left at the end of Millgate Drive two nights later. You notice strangers in this area. Somebody will have noticed someone that night’.
Jeff was on a panel with the local Labour councillor for the ward, a man called Royston Albright who lived just a stone’s throw behind the community centre where they were meeting. Sitting right in the middle of the ‘audience’ was the silent brooding figure of Melanie Patterson, Leroy’s mother. Jeff had met her when he’d gone to inform her of her son’s fate and he couldn’t help but find her an attractive woman. Her shiny black hair had been straightened and was at shoulder length, she certainly looked after her figure which had been accentuated by a tight fitting black dress, and her make-up was subtle.
On the face of it there was no shortage of suspects when it came to who might be responsible for the abduction of Leroy Patterson. The number of fellow professional criminals with a grudge against the Gorton boys was as long as your arm, not to mention the ordinary members of the community whose lives had been shattered by the actions of the gang in some way or other. But the use of violence by the Gorton boys and those associated with them was crude and banal. It was entirely physical and locked around fists and crow bars. Whoever had killed Leroy Patterson was in an altogether different league of savagery. According to the pathologist June Hawkins Leroy had been killed by suffocation but not with someone’s hands. The marks on the back of his broken neck suggested to June that it had been crushed by some sort of a device. And the only thing she could think of was the ancient execution device known as a garrotte.
The estate was sprawled out across a couple of miles to the east of Manchester city centre with the main Sheffield road as its artery and the Etihad stadium dominating the immediate skyline. The Gorton boys had taken over the entire area and the local housing association had been inundated with requests, mainly from elderly people who were too scared to go out, especially after dark, to be moved to somewhere else. But spare housing stock was low in most areas and the opportunity to grant the wishes of everyone who wanted to move out was just not possible. So people lived in fear. Local tradesmen making deliveries and workmen putting in telephone lines or fixing boilers always came in two’s. None of them would risk going onto the estate alone. Ambulances and fire engines had been regularly attacked whilst they’d been going about their duties and an elderly woman had recently died in the back of the ambulance that was trying to get her to hospital but which had been held up by a mob wielding large planks of wood and iron bars. They’d struck the engine bonnet, the sides and back of the ambulance, terrifying the woman inside in her final moments of life. They gave her no thought or decency but when they got fed up they finally just let the ambulance pass. It was all a game of power to them. They didn’t care who got hurt as long as it wasn’t them. The woman died before she reached the hospital.
‘When have you ever helped us?’ somebody cried out.
‘And when have you ever accepted our help in good faith?’ Jeff retorted. The room suddenly went quiet. He could see the ladies and gentlemen of the press who were in attendance suddenly sit up and take notice. They’re not interested in justice for anyone. They just want the angle of a white police officer losing his rag with local residents in a predominately West Indian community. That’s what they’d be looking for. And now he was about to hand it to them on a plate. ‘Look, it’s time for a dialogue between us based on truth and honesty. I’ll grant you that the police have sometimes been at fault in the past but I don’t accept that it’s all the fault of the police. It goes both ways and I will hunt down the killer or killers of Leroy Patterson and I will lead a team to the best of our collective responsibility. But I need something from you. I need to know the names of everyone who was part of the mob that surrounded the ambulance that prevented Evelyn Squires from getting to the hospital promptly after her heart attack. Evelyn Squires died. But you know that. You also know that the mob that surrounded the ambulance she was in was responsible. It wasn’t the police and it certainly wasn’t those brave paramedics. But you won’t give us any names will you? You expect us to do our job, and rightly so, but if it’s one of yours you let them get away with murder. And then you wonder why relations between us are so bad? Do you not see what I’m getting at here? Justice is not a one-way street. It means we have to talk to each other if we’re going to solve the murder of Leroy Patterson and find out who the cowards were who prevented Evelyn Squires from getting to the hospital. But as you accuse me and my colleagues of dragging our feet in relation to the death of Leroy Patterson you should remember that this community has got the highest rate of gang related crime in this city but if you allow yourselves to get to know me you’ll realise that the very last thing anybody could accuse me of is racism. The law is the law whether you’re a black teenager in a gang or an elderly white woman on her way to hospital. Think about it and work with me’.
Jeff sat down and breathed out slowly. T
here was silence in the room. He hadn’t expected to make that kind of speech but he thought it was necessary and perhaps overdue. He was sick and tired of the police taking all the knocks when half the time they’d be able to solve many more crimes if the public were open and frank with them. He was also sick and tired of people expecting him to be a racist just because he was a police officer. If that was the game they wanted to play then they most certainly had picked on the wrong one. It would no doubt get him into trouble with the powers that be on the force but so be it. Chief Superintendent Chambers would no doubt be calling him in to explain the press headlines that will follow but he was prepared for that. He looked at his watch. It was just before nine o’clock. He wanted to get home to see his son Toby who’d been off school with measles. Jeff had taken some time off earlier in the week to be with him but their live-in housekeeper and child minder Brendan had been doing a wonderful job and Toby was over the worse now. He’d probably be back at school in a day or two. In the meantime he had his iPad to keep him occupied and a multitude of films that Brendan had downloaded for him to watch whilst his temperature came down and the spots on his skin began to disappear.
It was clear from the way people were turning their backs on the panel that they considered the meeting to be over. Royston Albright began gathering his things together.
‘That was a good speech, Jeff’ said Royston. ’But if I’d have made it I’d lose my seat at the next election. I’m a member of this community so I speak as one who knows that they don’t like having it given back to them’.
‘I was quite mild and tempered compared to what I really wanted to say, Royston’ said Jeff. ’Maybe I’ll save the rest for next time but I’ve got to convince them to trust me. Surely it can’t be that impossible?’
‘Well you never know’ said Royston. ‘They did put a man on the moon after all’.