The Enemy Within (11 page)

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Authors: James Craig

BOOK: The Enemy Within
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XTC – Making Plans for Nigel

James Craig Q&A

Where does the “The Enemy Within” fit into the Carlyle series?

The novella ties in to a series of novels featuring Inspector John Carlyle, an Inspector working out of the police station at Charing Cross.

The first novel, “London Calling”, was published in 2011. Early on in that book, there is a flashback to Carlyle’s experiences as a young officer in the middle of the mineworkers’ strike, which was a major industrial dispute in Britain in the 1980s.

In the book, you see what happens
after
Carlyle gets hit on the head with a brick. “The Enemy Within” covers the days up to that point.

How important are the 1980s to the Carlyle series?

They are a key part of the Carlyle backstory - it was when he was starting out in his career. And, by British standards, it was a very aggressive, confrontational and hostile period. Inevitably, that has helped shape his somewhat cynical world view.

Why did you write a novella?

One of the ways in which e-publishing is changing the industry is that you can get things out far more quickly. One night I was looking at the Kindle chart on Amazon and noticed that there were quite a few short stories in there. I thought it would be fun to get something out before the next Carlyle novel (“The Circus”, the fourth novel in the series, which is out in February 2013). From there it only took about three months to get it written, edited and published.

Will there be more Carlyle novellas?

Yes. The basic idea is that we will alternate between a full length novel and a short story over the next year or so, and see what the response is like.

Novella #2 is not yet a gleam in my eye but it should be published sometime around May 2013.

Why do you write?

Simply because I enjoy it; I like the discipline of creating a structure around which to build a story and the sense of satisfaction that comes with finishing a first draft (before my editor tells me to go away and re-write it!).

Where do you write?

Wherever I can; I can’t be choosy.

I have a fantasy of having my own study, an attic where I can gaze out the window at the grey clouds scudding across the sky, typing a few words while sipping Caol Ila and listening to The Clash cranking out “White Man in Hammersmith Palais”. Sadly, living in the middle of London, there seems little chance of that ever happening.

Which writers do you read?

I like a good series: Robert Crais’s Elvis Cole and Joe Pike novels and Phillip Kerr’s Bernie Gunther books are good examples. I am a huge, huge fan of Andrea Camilleri’s Sicilian detective Salvo Montalbano and Donna Leon’s Venetian detective Guido Brunetti.

Brunetti is, I would say, the biggest inspiration for John Carlyle. Both Brunetti and Carlyle are professional, generally detached and occasionally jaded. Above all, both are grounded by their family life, which takes them away from the all too familiar
‘loner with a bottle’
stereotype. Donna Leon once said in an interview:
“They’re books. It’s make-believe. All I want to do is entertain. I love the funny bits.”
That sounds like a very good plan to me.

The Enemy Within Playlist

1.   ABC - S.O.S

2.   Aswad – Not
Satisfied

3.   Aztec Camera - Oblivious

4.   Bananarama – Cruel Summer

5.   The Beat - Stand down Margaret

6.   Big Country - In a Big Country

7.   Billy Bragg – A New England

8.   Black Uhuru – Happiness

9.   Blondie - One Way or Another

10. Boomtown Rats – Rat Trap

11. The Buzzcocks - Orgasm Addict

12. The Clash - Should I Stay or Should I Go

13. Elvis Costello – Pills and Soap

14. The Damned – Love Song

15. The Dead Kennedys - Viva Las Vegas

16. Depeche Mode – Everything Counts

17. Duran Duran – Hungry Like the Wolf

18. Ian Dury – Reasons to be Cheerful

19. Echo + The Bunnymen – A Promise

20. Gang of Four – I Love a Man in a Uniform

21. Marvin Gaye - Sexual Healing

22. Eddie and the Hot Rods - Do Anything You Wanna Do

23. Eddy Grant - Electric Avenue

24. Heaven 17 – (We Don’t Need This) Fascist Groove Thang

25. Human League - The Sound of the Crowd

26. The Jam – Going Underground

27. Joy Division – She’s lost Control

28. Madness – One Better Day

29. Bob Marley - Exodus

30. New Order - Ultraviolence

31. Orange Juice – Rip It Up

32. PiL - This is Not a Love Song

33. The Police – Every Breath You Take

34. The Pretenders - Back on the Chain Gang

35. Pink Floyd - Another Brick in the Wall

36. The Redskins – Unionize

37. The Ruts - Babylon’s Burning

38. Sham 69 - Hurry up Harry

39. Simple Minds – Promise You a Miracle

40. The Skids - Into the Valley

41. Specials - Ghost Town?

42. Bruce Springsteen – Growin’ Up

43. Steel Pulse – Klu Klux Klan

44. Stiff Little Fingers – Suspect Device

45. The Stranglers – Something Better Change

46. Donna Summer - She works hard for the money

47. Teardrop Explodes - Reward

48. Television - Friction

49. Tom Robinson Band - Power in the Darkness

50. U2 – Gloria

 

Listen to the playlist on Spotify

ONE

Shuffling into the tiny kitchen of his one-bedroom flat in Tufnell Park, north London, George opened a cupboard above his head and pulled out an economy tin of baked beans. After opening it, he poured about half of the contents into a small pan resting on the stove. What was left in the tin went into a small fridge that was otherwise almost empty, containing only a pint of milk and a couple of bottles of Red Stripe beer that had been on special offer in the local minimart.

Taking a box of matches from the worktop, George lit the gas and began stirring. When he estimated that the beans were on their way to being hot, he fished his last two slices of white bread out of their wrapper, and carefully dropped them into an ancient toaster. Switching it on gingerly, he stepped back quickly, fully expecting the machine to blow up at any moment. Returning his attention to the stove, he also kept half an eye on the bread. George knew that multi-tasking had never been his strong point, and more often than not something got burnt. It was quite stressful, really. Giving the beans another stir, he had a quick taste. Though bubbling away nicely, they were still quite cold. He then decided to pop the toast; the bread was barely coloured, but that was, he always thought, better than waiting too long and incinerating it.
Err on the side of caution
was his motto. Or, at least, it had been for along time now.

Happier that he could now focus exclusively on the pan, George relaxed. As he stirred the beans, he listened to the background hum of city life. George liked to listen.

Tonight, he could hear the television in the flat downstairs over the ever-present rumble of traffic from the road outside. After a few moments, his ears picked out the sound of footsteps coming up the stairs. He heard them stop outside his front door. After a couple more seconds, the buzzer sounded, harsh, flat and insistent.

At first, George didn’t react. He couldn’t imagine why anyone would want to ring his bell. When was the last time he’d received a caller? With no intention of answering the door, he carefully speared a bean and dropped it on to his tongue – still not quite hot enough.

The buzzer sounded again: another short, authoritative burst. George hesitated. Maybe he should see who it was. But would he have time to answer the door without the beans getting burnt? He remonstrated with himself for even debating about it. Why should he bother? It would only be some door-to-door salesman, a cold caller, wanting him to change his electricity supplier or something similar.

Dropping the toast on a nearly clean plate, he wondered if he should have any butter. The buzzer sounded again, longer this time, as if the person outside knew for sure that he was there.

‘Go away!’ George hissed, under his breath, as he gave the beans one last stir. Turning off the gas, he decided against the butter and poured the beans directly over the toast. Sticking the pan under the tap, he half filled it with water and dropped it in the sink.

He was hunting for a knife and fork when the buzzer went again, a series of short staccato bursts that said: Come on, answer the bloody door. I’m not taking no for an answer.

‘All right, all right, I’m coming.’ George turned away from his dinner and shuffled into the tiny hallway. As a matter of routine, he put his eye to the spyhole. There was no one there.
Typical
, he thought,
bloody kids. They’ll be hiding up on the next floor, thinking this is hilarious
. With a sigh, he turned back to his plate. Before he’d even taken a step, the doorbell went again, much louder this time, the buzzer right above the door drilling harshly into his skull.

‘You little sods.’ Turning on his heel, he swung the door open and stepped on to the landing, his chin making perfect contact with the fist that had been waiting for it all this time.

Waking up, George had a nasty taste in his mouth and a throbbing headache that made him want to cry. He was sitting in the living room, his hands and legs tied to the only upright chair. His upper chest had also been taped to the back of the chair, to ensure that he was totally immobile. There was another strip taped across his mouth. Realising that even utility companies would probably not go this far in order to convince customers to switch their accounts, he started to panic, gnawing at the tape with his teeth, and trying desperately to push himself out of the chair.

‘Relax, relax.’ The voice was quiet, soothing. ‘Just try to keep breathing.’ But the hand on his shoulder did nothing to help calm him down. It was wearing a rubber glove like the kind doctors wear, or those you see killers snapping on in movies, just before they butcher their victims.

Forcing himself to draw in a few deep breaths, George noticed the plate on the coffee table in front of him was empty now, save for a few breadcrumbs and a couple of stray beans. His stomach rumbled in protest, even though dinner was the least of his worries right now. Next to the plate was a large kitchen knife with an evil-looking serrated edge. George knew that the knife had not come from his kitchen. In a moment of bowel-freezing clarity, he realised that you wouldn’t bring along a knife like that if you weren’t intending to use it.

Shaking his head, George started to sob. Big, fat tears rolled down his cheeks, and over the tape covering his mouth. Surely this couldn’t be the end? His time had gone so quickly. He had squandered it so badly. There hadn’t even been enough that had happened in his life for anything exciting to flash in front of his eyes. What he saw was more of a short loop that kept repeating, like the trailer for a film that you know is going to be really quite disappointing.

‘Compose yourself,’ said the voice.

George sniffed. He could hear the banging of pans in next-door’s kitchen. A young Asian couple. There were voices, laughter. He didn’t know their names, but he had nodded to them on the stairs once or twice. A couple of times, he’d overheard them having sex through the paper-thin walls. Once he’d even jerked himself off to the rhythm of the woman’s cautious groans. That was the best sex he’d had in a long time. The memory of it caused a twinge of arousal in his groin, sparking a flicker of fight in his belly. Rocking backwards and forwards on his chair, he started screaming through the tape. All that came out, however, was a cautious moan, not unlike that of the careful lovemaking next-door, which he’d liked to listen to whenever he had the chance.

‘Enough.’ Again, there was the hand on his shoulder. ‘Don’t wear yourself out.’

Head bowed, George nodded.

For a moment, there was silence. Then the voice continued. ‘You have a very modest abode here, don’t you, George? All that education. All that money. All those opportunities. All that . . . privilege. How did you end up like this?’

George shrugged. He badly wanted to blow his nose. It was a question he himself had pondered many times.

The hand reached over and picked up the knife. George felt himself gag. The tip of the blade tickled the back of his neck. ‘You know why I’m here?’

George nodded.

‘You know what I’m going to do?’

Again, George tried to scream.

The blade appeared at his left cheek, reflecting the light from the sixty-watt light bulb overhead. ‘It can happen either when you’re dead, or while you’re still alive, but I would suggest the former.’ His guest finally stepped in front of him and brought the point of the blade to the tip of George’s nose. George felt himself go cross eyed as he tried to keep it in focus. The blade was moved a few inches back as if to give him a better look. ‘You have a choice. I’m not a sadist. Not like you.’

George vigorously shook his head, eyes wide. Along with the rubber gloves, the visitor was wearing a thin, clear, plastic raincoat, the kind that tourists bought when caught out by the weather. It hung all the way down to the floor and looked ridiculous.

‘Oh, you’d say that now. But then . . . when you had the chance.’

George felt something press into his flesh, then a burning sensation, then the agony of the knife chiselling into one of his ribs. He reached deep into his lungs and bellowed. The sound that emerged was like a constipated man trying to pass a cricket ball.

‘The harder you make it for me, the worse it will be for you. I’m no expert in this kind of thing, but I should be able to make a decent effort at cutting your throat. Sit still now . . .’

George was trying for one last deep breath as he watched the knife disappear under his chin. Looking down, he was distracted by the sound of something splattering off his killer’s raincoat. The knife flashed in front of him for a second time but by now his head was slumped on his chest, as if he was mesmerised by the blood that had filled his dinner plate to overflowing.

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