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Authors: Paul Kane

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BOOK: Hooded Man
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Hunter and prey.

It was only during this time that he felt something akin to being alive again, felt a surge of energy that reminded him he wasn’t just a shadow, simply a ghost of his former self.

But in this animal, he also recognised a kindred spirit; a once proud creature reduced to a victim by circumstance.

Robert lowered the bow, nodding to himself and to the stag. The animal stood stunned for a second or two, not understanding how it could still be alive – the hunter had him in his sights. But it didn’t question for long, running off back into the woods; vanishing from sight.

Robert watched it go, knowing that another kill had never really been the purpose of this exercise. He didn’t need any more meat, and didn’t hunt just for sport – Robert didn’t have a trophy room in the lean-to. They’d shared something in that one brief moment, the stag and him. Both knew what it was like to be on the run, what it was like to escape.

Above all else, both Robert and the stag knew that he could have taken that life, but chose not to.

All of which meant that the hunter, the hooded man, was still the victor.

And so it was his turn to disappear back into the trees.

 

 

CHAPTER THREE

 

 

H
OW HAD THIS
happened? How had they gone from being the hunters to the prey?

One minute, they’d been the top dogs around here, now they were facing a serious ultimatum. Granger still couldn’t quite believe it, back to being pushed around again, just like when he was growing up. Back to following orders.

In the past it had been his mother’s boyfriends issuing them, a succession of no-hopers who seemed to view him as their personal slave half the time. His mother said nothing to them, mainly because she did the same:
fetch me this, fetch me that, make us something to eat, get us something to drink
. And if he didn’t comply immediately, he was looking at being beaten around the living room of their tiny council flat in Finchley. Granger might have blamed it on growing up without a father, except that particular ‘role model’ would probably have made things worse, from what little he’d heard. That’s if he could have stayed out of jail long enough.

None of the boyfriends had lasted, not once they’d got what they wanted out of Granger’s mum: somewhere to stay rent free for a while and someone who wouldn’t complain in the bedroom when they forced her to do the most depraved things. He could hear them at night, no matter how much he pulled the pillows up around his ears – the moans and the screams, and, sometimes, the crying afterwards. That was when he wanted to go to her, when he felt what you were supposed to feel for a mother. The last boyfriend, Jez, had been the worst of the lot. He’d even been dealing from their flat. And, once, when they were alone in the place together, Granger had said something back to Jez so he’d pulled a handgun on him, one of those customised replica imports from abroad.

“You’re a smart kid, aren’t you? Got a smart mouth... How smart are you now, eh? Eh?” he’d said, turning it on him. Granger closed his eyes, fully expecting the man to shoot. Luckily, his mother had come home at that moment, and Jez had tucked the gun quickly back away in his jeans.

It wasn’t even as if school was an escape from what was going on. His teachers barked at him because he hadn’t done his homework – especially his old French teacher, Mr Dodds. When did he ever have time? Where was he supposed to work? As for the other kids, he never fitted in with them either. They all had their little gangs and they made it abundantly clear he wasn’t welcome in any of them, pounding it into him when he didn’t get the message. As for girls, well, who would look at him twice?

When he’d left home at sixteen, bailing as soon as he could to move into a shared digs only one step up from a squat – his mother’s cries of “You ungrateful little sod!” still ringing in his ears – it had been the people down the dole office who’d lorded it over him. They sent him to interviews for jobs he so obviously wasn’t qualified to do. Until, eventually, he’d been taken pity on. Hired as a labourer: paid peanuts for the privilege of being a dogsbody to the other workers on the building site.

“Hey, streaky bacon,” a site manager called Mick always used to call across, after Granger’s gangly teenaged frame, “we’re parched over here – fetch us another round of tea, will you? Come on, move your skinny arse!” Then, when he brought the tray across, they’d make fun of him again, getting him to pick up tools from the floor, then kicking him over. It was just a bit of fun, they said. That’s all.

Granger used to wish they would drop dead; wished every last one of them would just drop dead, in fact.

He’d never expected his wish to come true.

People hacked and coughed in the streets, spraying blood over pavements, falling where they stood in some cases.

And while everyone else got sick from the disease they were calling the AB Virus, Granger finally got a break. Instead of coughing up blood, his actually saved him. Against his better judgement, he’d called round to see his mother while she was still alive... just. Even when she was dying, she’d ordered him to fetch her stuff; bring pills so she could get better.

“There isn’t anything that can do that,” he’d told her.

“You...
ack
... you fetch me something right now you...
ack
... you fucking –”

“You ain’t going to get better, Mum!” he said, finally losing his temper. “There isn’t a medicine on this planet that can cure you. How d’you feel about that?”

She coughed and spat blood in his face, though whether it was intentional or not Granger didn’t know.

“I’ll be seeing you,” he told her as he began walking out, knowing full well that he never would again. Then he’d gone to the bathroom and washed his face, drying it on the towel. It was as he was doing so that he noticed a shape behind the shower curtain. Granger jumped, but the thing didn’t move. Slowly, he reached out and pulled back the plastic curtain. Jez was lying there in the bath, a needle sticking out of his arm and sticky redness dribbling from his mouth. He’d OD’d rather than face the final stages of the virus. Granger had seen plenty of dead bodies lately, but not up close like this. He shook his head, remembering what a bastard this man had been. Bending down, he cocked his head and whispered, “Who’s the smart one now?” Then he lifted the body, checking the back of the man’s jeans for the pistol he always kept about his person. Granger had taken the pistol, and turned his back on Jez, his mother, and the place where he’d grown up.

To Granger’s mind, he was at last reaping the rewards of years of misery. During the Culling Year, when those in charge had attempted to stop the spread of the plague, there had been rich pickings for the likes of him. Rumours flew around of soldiers trying to take control, even of something big taking shape on Salisbury Plain, but it hadn’t affected Granger’s plans. He’d moved relatively freely from place to place, taking whatever he liked from the shops, stuffing his pockets with money (it never occurred to him at the time that it would be useless later on) and generally having the time of his life... while everyone else was losing theirs.

And he encountered more like him, young men who saw opportunity in the wake of this new turn of events. Granger befriended a few – like Ennis, who he found working his way through the entire stock of beef burgers in a deserted McDonald’s: it was where he’d used to work before it all hit the fan. Others he gently ‘persuaded’ to join him. Just having the pistol helped in that respect, though later they found all the weapons they needed when the men in yellow suits who were supposed to be cleaning up the streets came down with the virus too. Their numbers grew, all with a common goal – to help themselves to everything they’d been denied before. Granger finally had a gang to call his own and, though he knew there must be more in other parts of London, beyond that even, they ruled the roost in their little corner of the world. They called themselves ‘The Jackals’ and operated out of Barnet’s council offices in Whetstone. Granger liked the irony of that; sticking it to the owners of his former home.

Girls, the ones that were left alive – and the ones who needed protection from other dangers on the streets these days – suddenly found Granger irresistible. Some of them were pretty good looking, as well; the kind he wouldn’t have stood even the remotest chance with before.

At last they were the ones on top. None of them, especially Granger, would ever have to take another order or do as they were told ever again.

Or so they’d thought.

Then came the night of the attack. The first Granger knew about what was happening was when he got a garbled message over his walkie-talkie. It was Ennis, on watch outside, screaming that a bunch of men had come out of nowhere and taken down a handful of Jackals at a stroke. Granger, who was in the middle of making paper aeroplanes out of old council records, rushed to the window to see.

Men on bikes were shooting at the building, making passes and picking off the Jackals on guard duty downstairs. They were much better trained than his gang. Older too, nothing like the punks they’d fended off in the past.

“Ennis...” he shouted into the mouthpiece. “Ennis, get back inside and bring the rest of the guys with you! We’ll hold them off from up here.” But, even as he said it, he heard windows smashing from several different directions at once. The men were entering the building right now, giving them no time to prepare. Looking back, Granger would realise just how amateurish The Jackals had been – how much more they could have fortified the building in readiness for just such an attack. Though even then, he doubted whether they’d have stood a chance against merciless professionals like these.

Granger called to the rest of his ‘men’ further inside the open-plan office, telling them to group at the stairwell, just by the lift doors. There were hardly any replies.

By the time he got down there it was all over. Those Jackals who hadn’t been shot were on their knees in the entranceway to the office itself, hands behind their heads. Yet more were being marched down the stairs, along with some of the girls who’d been keeping them company. Granger raised his pistol, the one he’d taken from Jez so long ago and which he always kept about him – mainly as a reminder that he would never be pushed around again.

Several automatic rifles swivelled in his direction, clacking, ready to fire. Granger’s gun hand began to shake.

“Gentlemen... Gentlemen...
Écoutez
!” came a voice from the doorway. There was a distinct accent that Granger recognised from those French lessons with Mr Dodds. “Hold your fire. This is obviously the very person we have come here to speak with.” The man the voice belonged to came forward. He had dark eyes, which bored into Granger, making him feel cold inside. He smoothed down his black and grey combats as if he were wearing a Savile Row suit.

“Get out,” shouted Granger, his voice wavering. “Get out now or...” But he had nothing to back the threat up with.

The guy facing him, their leader – he could tell by the way he was carrying himself – smiled chillingly. “Oh, I believe we will stay for a while. Won’t we?” he said to his men, and the closest half dozen – obviously his elite – nodded. “After all, we have a lot to discuss.”

Discuss? Granger couldn’t see much room for manoeuvre in that department; it was a pretty clear-cut situation. This man had them by the balls. “What... what do you want?”

“What does any of us want?” answered the man. “Respect, loyalty... Fear.”

They both knew he had the latter, and probably commanded the others through it. “I’m... I’m listening,” Granger told him.

“Of course you are. All right. My proposition is simple,” explained the man, taking off a pair of black leather gloves and revealing the rings on his fingers. “It’s one I have put to several little ‘operations’ like yours, on the way to London and through it. Some listened. Some didn’t.”

Granger raised an eyebrow. “Proposition?”

“Yes.
Un choix
. You understand? A choice.” He walked past one of the girls being held captive, who was only wearing a shirt, and ran a finger down her cheek. She flinched and he gave a small laugh, revealing hideously yellow teeth. Looking back over at Granger, he said, “You and your people can either join us or...”

“Or what?” Granger demanded, albeit half-heartedly, regretting it even as the words were tumbling from his mouth.

“Tanek?” called the leader to one of his men. The crowds parted and a huge, bulky soldier with olive skin and short hair stepped forward. Granger couldn’t help thinking that he should drop the ‘e’ in his name and just go with ‘Tank.’ He held Ennis by the scruff of the neck, was practically carrying him like that, the boy’s feet barely touching the floor.

“Granger... I’m sorry, I –” Tanek threw him down on the ground.

“Now,” began the man wearing the smart combats, “show our friend here what the alternative to joining us would be.”

Tanek unhooked the crossbow dangling on a strap from his shoulder, and aimed the weapon at Ennis’s head.

“No!” shouted Granger, raising his pistol.

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