DEATHLOOP (38 page)

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Authors: G. Brailey

Tags: #Reincarnation mystery thriller, #Modern reincarnation story, #Modern paranormal mystery, #Modern urban mystery, #Urban mystery story, #Urban psychological thriller, #Surreal story, #Urban paranormal mystery, #Urban psychological fantasy, #Urban supernatural mystery

BOOK: DEATHLOOP
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“Come here, just come here…”

“I can’t leave Clarissa.”

“Then let me come to you.”

“I’ll come when I’m through, oh and I love you by the way.”

In the morning the doctor came and found them telling them that the operation had gone well.

“He’s okay?” Zack blurted out, “he’s okay? Tell us he’s okay.”

“He’s still very poorly but initial signs are good. I should be able to tell you a little more later on.”

Zack and Clarissa stayed in the hospital all day despite Clarissa encouraging him to go home and sleep, but only when news came that Sam was stabilizing did Zack finally agree.

“Go and find Veronica,” said Clarissa, “she’ll look after you.”

“My God, Zack…” was all Veronica said when she saw him, leading him into her bedroom, pushing him on the bed and tugging at his shoes. “Do you want a drink or anything?”

“No, just you,” said Zack.

By the time Veronica had climbed up next to him Zack was asleep. She watched him for a while, then sneaked off downstairs to call Clarissa.

“How is he?” she asked, “how’s Sam?”

“Holding his own they say, whatever the hell that means. Is Zack with you?”

“Yes, he looks terrible.”


The whole thing is terrible
,” said Clarissa, sounding angry with Zack for the first time.

“Call us if there’s any change.”

“Of course I will.”

When Zack woke at 3 am, wretched and full of fear the first thing he did was check his phone. Relieved to find no messages or texts he wandered down to the kitchen and dug out a bottle of wine. A little later Veronica joined him.

“I woke you,” he said, “I’m sorry.”

She shook her head and shrugged, then they sat at the table, facing each other.

“I spoke with Clarissa, she said Sam was doing okay.”

“When? When was that?” Zack demanded, greedy for information.

“Not long after you got here,” aware as she said it that hours later anything could have happened.

“What’s wrong with me, Veronica,” said Zack, “why am I like this?”

“Why are you like what?”

“Such a bloody mess… I went to see an old mate, a psychologist or a psychiatrist, what’s the difference? I can never remember…”

“So that’s where you got to, and did he help at all?”

“Yes and no, but I think we have to accept that I’m on my own with this death thing, it’s a one off.”

“But you’re not on your own, I’m here, remember? By the way,” said Veronica, “who’s Susan?”

Zack shot her an uneasy glance. “Who told you about Susan?”

“Clarissa…”

“What did she say?”

“She just said that it wasn’t Sam who’d dropped you in it with Geoff, it was Susan.”

“I’ll tell you some other time,” he said, relieved Clarissa had said nothing else.

“What happened with you and Sam?”

”I thought he was… look, it sounds pathetic now, but I thought he’d got me fired and was laughing about it,” and immediately Zack knew what she was thinking. “It wasn’t just paranoia. It was Sam Stein sleeping with the enemy… of losing him, of all those things. We have the capacity to hurt each other very deeply, Sam and me, if that’s not stating the obvious. We’ve had bust ups before, nasty, violent rows, especially when we were stoned or when one of us set about destroying the competition.”

“You make it sound like a love affair.”

“It was, it is, it always has been,” said Zack, tired of justifying his relationship with Sam, longing for someone just to get it, to understand and not to judge, “look, we don’t have sex or anything, but yes, it is a love affair, I put my hands up to that.”

Zack slumped back in his chair, pleased to have owned up to this, but anxious too. The last thing he wanted now was for Veronica to dump him.

“And yet you tried to kill him…”

“Yes, I did, and if anything happens to him… there’s no future for me, I know that, I’d have no reason to keep breathing.”

After a few moments Veronica got up without saying another word and went upstairs. Zack knew that he had hurt her, but he couldn’t pretend, not now, and although Zack had avoided Veronica’s question he knew really why he’d attacked Sam. Each time his mother had brought another cheap trick into the house he’d felt this overwhelming desire to hurt not only the new boyfriend but his mother too for reaffirming this feeling of utter worthlessness, but how could he admit to Veronica that he had always had trouble with rejection? He would struggle admitting that to Justin or to anyone, Sam included, although he knew that Sam had worked all that out for himself, it was a weakness, and Zack Fortune liked to make out he didn’t do weakness.

Zack had told Veronica that he loved her, and in his own way he did, but right at that moment had anyone asked him to swap Sam’s recovery for the permanent loss of Veronica he would have gladly agreed. He found himself thinking back to the time Nick Mallik had run out of Cambridge for the very last time. Zack had woken up to find him gone. It was early morning and he felt like hell, too much skunk and a clutch of lethal pills that had been kicking around the flat calling out to him for days. He woke Sam asking about Nick.

“Gone, mate,” said Sam, pissed off to be disturbed.

“Where to?”

“Andromeda,” said Sam, turning over and trying to get back to sleep.

“I’m going to find him,” said Zack, keen to plunder a decent supply of speed he knew Nick still had in his back pocket.

“No point, he’s gone for good he told me, and he won’t be coming back.”

“What did you say to him?” said Zack, alarmed.

“That he should sling his hook, that if he stayed round here and stayed round you I’d slice his idiot fucking head off.”

“You shit, Sam Stein, you bastard little cockroach!”

Sam smiled and shrugged, and although initially Zack wanted to punch him, instead, he leant down, tussled his hair and planted a great big kiss on his head. Here was a guy who would threaten violence to someone much bigger, much tougher rather than share him and Zack just loved him for it. It was what he had longed for his mother to do for so many years, but unlike Sam, she was never committed enough to her son to do it.

Then Zack left the flat, roaming the streets in search of an early morning shop that sold Curly Wurlys. When they met up again later that day Zack accused Sam of pulling rank and Sam didn’t deny it, but that was it, chapter closed.

Zack returned to the hospital at 6 am, to find Clarissa parked up next to Sam in Critical Care.

“How is he?” said Zack.

“No change.”

“He’s going to make it, Clarissa, I know he is. Listen, I haven’t said sorry, so I’m saying it now.”

Clarissa waved a hand to dismiss the idea, as though it were neither here nor there.

“I thought he’d betrayed me. It doesn’t excuse what I did, but that’s the truth. I don’t deserve him, or you for that matter, or Veronica or anyone, I keep saying that but it’s true. Why the hell do you put up with me?”

“Because we know you, we know who you are, and more importantly we know
why
you are.”

This surprised Zack, curious now as to what Sam had told her over the years. “Then tell me, Clarissa, will you, because I’m very much in the dark with all that.”

“How’s Veronica?”

“Not happy, I love the woman and I treat her like crap.”

“No changes there then.”

“I’ll make it up to her but I can’t think of anything but Sam right now.” Then they fell to silence, both of them watching as simple plastic tubes worked their magic, keeping Sam alive.

Later in the day, cutting through the medical jargon, the feeling was that Sam would probably pull through, although whether his speech and movement would be permanently impaired remained to be seen. Zack felt a surge of joy race through him when he heard the words, wanting to hug the dreary doctor, wanting to hug the whole world.

The following day Sam’s eyes opened. He looked round to see Zack and Clarissa both transfixed on him and about to burst into tears.

“God, Sam, don’t do this to us,” whispered Clarissa.

“Yes, bastard, listen to your wife for once,” said Zack.

Sam’s eyes closed almost immediately but he was smiling. Clarissa rushed off to tell the nurse the good news, leaving Zack sending up a prayer of thanks to anyone who was listening, to anyone who had given Sam Stein back the gift of life.

That night, when Zack was reassured Sam was actually stable and not giving them false hope, he set off home. His flat was cold, damp almost, but he was mighty relieved just to be there. He realised now, if he hadn’t before, how relative things were. Up until the moment he thought Sam might die, he had only been concerned with the dead people, Susan and Russell, but compared to the very real threat of losing Sam, they barely registered. He decided to contact Veronica and to make amends, but Veronica would not pick up and he had to acknowledge the fact that the poor woman had probably had enough. But at midnight she called asking if she could come over.

Half an hour later she was standing in the middle of his living room wearing a vintage green velvet dress, very high heels and a plethora of irregular chunky stones set in silver at her neck. Her hair shone like it had been polished and her eyes gleamed. Veronica French was impossibly beautiful and at that moment Zack would have done just about anything to keep her.

“How’s Sam?”

“Recovering… at least, we think so,” said Zack, crossing fingers on both hands and holding them up.

“I think… maybe… well… I think it might be better if we call it a day.”

“Do you?”

“Yes, I do,” she said.

Zack sighed. He had had conversations like this so many times over the years. Streams of girls he had enraged in different ways, stamping their feet, calling his bluff. “If that’s what you want,” he said after a few seconds, confident that she didn’t, after all, no one said it was over looking like this, not unless they wanted to be persuaded otherwise.

“That’s what
you
want isn’t it?” she said, annoying Zack a little at her lack of originality.

“No, it’s not what I want, not by any stretch of the imagination.”

“So what do you want?”

“I want you, but from the moment we met my life has gone into free fall. It doesn’t mean I love you less.”

“But you don’t do love.”

“Who told you that?”

“You, indirectly…”

“I don’t do it very often, no, but surely that’s a good thing. Surely then it means more.”

“You’d choose Sam over me every time, that’s what you said, give or take, and that doesn’t do much for the ego somehow.”

“I don’t go to bed with Sam Stein, neither do I want to. I only want to go to bed with you.”

He was standing very close now, tracing the curve of her chin with his thumb, gazing into her huge, clean, cautious eyes.

“You’re damned hard work, d’you know that?”

“Yes, I do know that since you ask… but the general consensus is… I’m worth the effort.”

Zack kissed her like she was the last woman on earth, and as much as she fought it, she failed. She couldn’t help but grab him back, shocking herself by the desire she felt which made her words and all her good intentions go up in smoke.

CHAPTER 24
 

For the next month or so Zack felt that his life was at last reverting to some kind of normality. Sam was making progress, and when Zack had demanded to know if a relapse was likely the doctor had been vaguely reassuring. Sam’s speech and his recall of language which had not been brilliant at first was getting better with the help of a humourless speech therapist called Evelyn, who Sam tolerated. Zack’s relationship with Veronica had taken off again to the extent that she was spending more and more time at his flat, and for once he found that heartening rather than threatening. He had enough money to tide him over, so he put off the thought of meaningful employment for the time being and tried to relax.

When Tracy called to say that the police were dropping their investigation into Russell’s death, it seemed to Zack that he was in sight of the finish line. All that was left was the drugs charge and that was considered so inconsequential it was being dealt with at a magistrate’s court a month hence. Zack found himself so re-energized by the uneventful few weeks he suggested to Veronica they took a holiday somewhere, but Veronica had private shows booked and commissions to finish which ruled it out. Justin had rung up a few times, expressing concern about Sam when really he just wanted a conversation with Zack, and to see him, so with Veronica busy in the gallery, Zack decided to hook up with him again and set off to drive to Creed Mill Bridge.

Justin seemed distracted when they met, suggesting they ate out, plus a taxi to take them so they could drink themselves stupid if they so desired. Zack agreed to the dinner, although his appetite had diminished to such an extent recently, frequently he found himself on his way to bed in the knowledge that he had eaten nothing all day.

The restaurant Justin recommended was called ‘Imogen’s’, bang in the middle of the main drag in Burford. The place was pleasant enough, unostentatious, with a clubby atmosphere and boasting Michelin stars. Justin was welcomed like an old friend by the head waiter and they were shown to his usual table tucked away in a rambling, ancient conservatory at the back.

“So, Sam’s on the mend, that’s great news,” said Justin, once they’d started on the wine.

“And we made it up, Justin. He’s refused to press charges, did I tell you? And more important than all that, he’s forgiven me.”

“Of course he has, Sam couldn’t function without you.”

“Nor me without him.”

“And that’s the bigger mystery, in fact the only mystery. I still don’t get it, no one does.”

“Yeah, and I don’t get it myself either sometimes.”

“It must be something more than friendship,” said Justin, hopefully.

“Come on, who in their right mind would want to go to bed with Sam Stein?”

“Clarissa?”

“Yes, and we all know how strange Clarissa is. He’s a hideous little gnome, and believe me, when it comes to matters of a sexual nature I’ve got better taste.”

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