Beyond the Rage (15 page)

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Authors: Michael J. Malone

Tags: #Crime, #Thriller, #Fiction, #Scottish, #glasgow

BOOK: Beyond the Rage
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Colin’s eyes bore into Kenny’s. They burned with the need to offload. Words piled up behind them and then faded into the mists of the unspoken. Words without a voice; sound stolen from them, perhaps by an old promise. Colin returned to his drink. ‘Nothing,’ he said. ‘I have nothing to say to you.’

‘Well guess what,
Uncle
Colin,’ Kenny said, ‘I have plenty to say to you.’ He didn’t know what prompted him to offload in such a way. Blame the concussion, blame his fatigue, he didn’t really give a toss who to blame, he just needed to get the words out and he didn’t much care that the man was worried sick about his wife. ‘That woman up those stairs is worth twenty of you. Thirty. Why she stuck around a miserable old cunt like you I’ll never know.’ He paused, searching to see if his words were reaching through. ‘You do nothing but complain. How long have you two been married? Twenty-odd years? Fuck me. Folk get less for murder and that’s what it would feel like being married to you. Murder.’

Kenny leaned back in his chair, disgusted with himself. What was he achieving here? Nothing. This was like pulling the legs off a defenceless spider. He took a sip of his coffee and swallowed. ‘I was just a boy. My mum died. My dad vanished and you turned on me.’

‘I never raised a hand to you.’ Colin roused himself. ‘God knows I should have. You might have turned out better.’

‘You didn’t need to lay a hand on me. Sticks and stones, Uncle Colin. That’s the lie that every adult passes to children, but every child knows the truth of it. Long after the bruises have faded, the petty insults, the sting of the sarcasm carries on burrowing under the skin.’ Kenny pushed the coffee mug out of reach. He couldn’t bear the taste of it. ‘You had the chance to do some good. The chance to offer a little kindness to a wee boy whose whole world had been ripped apart. But you chose to give in to your petty jealousy and to make that wee boy’s life a misery.’

‘Jealousy?’ Colin laughed harshly. ‘You haven’t a fucking clue, boy. What did I have to be jealous of a wee skelf like you?’

‘I was my father’s son,’ Kenny said and watched the other man’s expression. ‘You and him were friends, were you not?’

At least that was the family legend. They had been inseparable from school, went in to the same line of work and met the Collins sisters. Got one each, got married and had a child each. Then the timing belt snapped in that particular engine and it all fell apart.

‘Then my mum died.’ Kenny spoke the words out loud, not sure where he was going with them. The idea pressed at his mind, looking for articulation but remained just beyond him, like a note of currency blown just out of his reach by a stiff breeze.

‘Your mum was worth ten of him. Twenty,’ Colin said.

The breeze fell and the note landed in his hand.

‘You married the wrong sister.’ The words were out of Kenny’s mouth before the thought was fully formed.

‘What are you talking about?’ asked Colin, and Kenny could tell he had something.

‘You fell for my mum. Except she was in love with my dad and you got Vi by default.’

‘Rubbish,’ said Colin. ‘Total rubbish.’ His expression was dark and twisted.

‘That’s why you’ve been a complete tosser to your wife all these years...’

‘Fucking nonsense.’ Colin stood up.

‘That’s why you couldn’t bear the sight of me,’ Kenny stood up. The two men stood face to face. His uncle trembled with the force of his anger.

‘And that’s why you’ve got it in for me,’ said Kenny, aware that a he was spraying saliva as he spoke.

‘I’ve had enough of this.’ Colin turned and walked out of the room.

‘Come back here,’ Kenny raised his voice. Every head in the room turned to see what was going on. Kenny followed his uncle out of the cafeteria and caught up with him outside. He raced ahead of him and barred his path.

‘What aren’t you telling me, Uncle?’ Kenny demanded.

‘There you go again, Kenny,’ said Colin, refusing to bow under Kenny’s anger. ‘Thinking you know everything.’ His smile was one of triumph. ‘You know nothing. You can only guess at the truth.’

‘I know this much.’ Kenny allowed free rein to his imagination and threw a wildcard into the conversation. ‘My mother didn’t commit suicide. She was murdered and maybe you had a hand in staging it to look like she had.’

Colin slapped him. Hard. Kenny’s ears rang with it.

‘Whatever hole you crawled out of, away you go back into it,’ said Colin.

‘Hoy!’ A passing male nurse stopped and challenged them. ‘What the hell’s going on here?’

‘Nothing, mate,’ Kenny rubbed at his face. ‘A family misunderstanding.’

‘Family, my arse,’ said Colin. ‘The day my wife brought you into my home was the worst day of my life.’ He spat on the ground. ‘Now, I’m off to spend time with my sick wife. You’re no longer welcome.’ His expression was carved from rock. ‘Just like your father. Thieves and whores. That’s all you’re good for.’

28

He knew where his aunt and uncle kept a spare key to their front door. His Uncle Colin was a sucker for those wee shopping magazines that fell out of every Sunday newspaper. The ones that most people threw in the trash. He was always buying stuff from them and one particular item was a false rock with a secret compartment large enough for a key that would sit on the back step.

Kenny bent down to pick the rock up and when he straightened up his head spun. He breathed deep, blinked hard. Fuck. Still with the concussion. He should really be tucked up in bed but he couldn’t allow himself any rest. He had no idea how long Colin would remain at the hospital.

Nor had he any idea what he was looking for, but he couldn’t shake the feeling that his uncle knew more than he was letting on.

Once inside he paused in the hallway. The house really hadn’t changed much since that day his aunt brought him back from the children’s home. He looked to the left and the door into the living room. He could remember his uncle standing there that day as if barring him from entering the room. A look on his face that could sour wine. Oh, he
’d
put on an act for his wife, but Kenny was a good reader of people and he knew from the first false ‘Welcome home, kiddo’ that his uncle would rather he find a bus to run under.

The colours used in the decor hadn’t changed much either. Magnolia paint over woodchip. The cheap bastard. Here and there his aunt had dressed it up with a female touch, but was clearly hampered by her husband’s control over the family purse.

He quickly reviewed what he knew of the house. If his uncle was going to hide something of value only to him, where would he put it? The rooms everyone used could be discounted. The only places he and Ian hadn’t been allowed to roam as boys were the master bedroom, the loft and the garden shed.

The master bedroom could also be ruled out. The old fucker wasn’t daft enough to hide stuff where his wife might find it. Which left the loft and the shed as likely possibilities. He walked to the kitchen and looked in the drawers near the back door, found the back door key and a longer key that could only be for something like a shed.

Walking down the neat path, past the carefully planted borders he was aware of someone’s eyes on him. He turned and looked into the windows of the neighbours. Shit. He
’d
been spotted. It was old Kate Ford next door, one hand pulling back the net curtain with the other offering a wave. She paused in her wave and made a sign for him to wait.

Seconds later she was out of the door and hobbling on arthritic legs to a position just over the waist-high fence from him. She didn’t move as fast or as much as she used to, but her need for information would have propelled her into place even if she were to use her very last charge of energy.

‘Kenny, son,’ she breathed, one hand gripping her cardigan closed over her chest. ‘How’s your auntie?’

‘She’s in a bad way, Mrs Ford.’

‘It’s terrible, son, just terrible.’ As she spoke her expression was six parts sympathy and six parts excitement. She had something to talk about. Something she could be an authority on for the rest of the neighbourhood gossips. ‘Just terrible. One minute happy as Larry, the next you’re paralysed and in the hospital.’

‘She’s in the best place though, eh?’ Kenny mentally shook himself for making the conversation last one second longer than it needed to. What he really wanted to say to the old biddy was,
Fuck off back into your hovel
. Instead he fixed his smile in place and played the role of concerned relative.

‘How’s your Uncle Colin?’

‘He’s not taken it so well,’ Kenny replied while wondering how he was going to explain why he was going in to the garden shed.

‘And how are you, son?’ she asked. Her tone suggested this was more than a polite enquiry. ‘Haven’t seen you round here for ages. Then it’s twice in the one week…’ A carefully judged pause that she expected him to fill.

‘Oh,’ he said, putting a hand to his head. ‘A wee spot of rain.’ He looked up to the sky and the light covering of cloud, hoping he could convince the old woman against all the evidence. ‘Think we’re in for a downpour.’

‘You think, son?’ Mrs Ford scanned the sky, looking more worried about the possibility of rain than she had about the health of her neighbour. ‘I
’d
better be getting back in. It’s my lumbago.’ She turned and evidenced even more speed than when she arrived at the fence she returned to her house. And her vigil by the window.

Inside the shed Kenny was faced with the usual array of garden implements and a few more besides: a lawnmower with a bright orange lid, electric hedge-trimmer, shovel, weeding tools, bags of compost and stacks of pots. Everything was neatly in place with barely a speck of dirt. If the garden hadn’t looked so well maintained, he
’d
have thought that these tools were never used.

He looked up at the higher shelves and spotted a couple of tins. He pulled them down one by one, but they contained nothing but nails and screws and screwdrivers. There was nothing here that suggested evidence of a dodgy past.

He left the shed and locked it. As he walked down the garden and towards the back door he saw Mrs Ford at her window. She was scanning the sky for evidence of rain. Kenny gave her a cheeky wave. Back in the kitchen he put everything exactly where it had been. There was no real need for such subterfuge because as sure as Mrs Ford got her blue rinse every fourth pension day, when she saw Uncle Colin return she
’d
be over to tell him that Kenny had been here, as fast as her arthritic wee legs could carry her.

Next stop, the loft.

Standing in the upstairs landing he stretched up with his left hand and touched the ceiling. All it needed was a wee jump and a push and he could open the hatch.

He and Ian had been barred from entry as teenagers. Which of course meant that as soon as Uncle Colin was out of the house they would be clambering inside for a rummage.

Kenny jumped and with both hands pushed at the attic’s hatch. This was enough to dislodge it and give him room. His next tactic was to jump and grab hold of the rim. From there it was an easy pull for a man of his strength to get his chest up through the space and from there a lean forward, a twist and he could sit on the ledge. His vision melted, his stomach churned. He paused to allow his breathing to return to normal. This head injury was having more effect that he thought it might. Normally he would be completely unaffected by such a manoeuvre.

He knew there was a cord just by his right hand to switch on a bare lightbulb, but he didn’t need it. There was enough daylight coming in from the two small windows positioned either side of the eaves. He turned his head left and right and viewed the narrow space. It was just as he remembered: full of old toys, clothes and books. The hoardings of a couple who believed everything could be recycled within the extended family and then never bothered to do it.

He pulled his legs under him and stood. He sneezed and banged his head. He groaned. Just what he needed, more brain damage. He crouched and waited for his eyes to adjust to the gloom.

The air was dry, full of dust and smelled of things left untouched for decades. Three suitcases sat just ahead of him. He snapped open the locks of the top one and recoiled at the sudden noise. Inside was a neat collection of knitted children’s clothes. In the weak light he could see that they were mainly blue or cream. They
’d
have been Ian’s then.

He worked his way carefully through each of the suitcases. More clothing. Nothing of interest. Next was a parade of boxes, all of them would have been brightly coloured at one point and advertising the wares within. One read
Kellogs
, another
Tetley
. They were closed with brown tape. He picked the Kellogs box and carefully peeled back the tape to reveal a pile of comics. There were copies of
Victor
and
Roy of the Rovers
.
The Beano
and
The Dandy
. Could be worth a few pounds, Kenny thought, if his uncle could be bothered to get off his fat arse and sell them.

He held one up to his face and smelled the paper. He smiled. Memories of rainy Sundays. He and Ian on their bunk beds, shouting out story lines, wondering if the writers of the comics knew any other German than
Achtung
or
Mein Gott in Himmel
.

He closed the boxes up with care. This was no time to be sentimental. He needed to find evidence of his uncle’s duplicity, not hop down the tracks of memory lane.

Working his way down the loft and back up the other side he found more of the same; clothes, toys, books. He was replacing one large box when he spotted the edge of something sticking out from under a thick layer of loft insulation. He pulled out a small wooden box. The outside surfaces displayed the black and white checked board of a chess set. He turned the box every which way and could see that it was hinged. He remembered having one of these as a kid. Inside his box each half held a piece of foam with two rows of holes, each just big enough to take a piece of the set.

Blowing some dust from the surface, he opened it up. A piece of paper fell out. No, not a piece of paper: a photograph. He picked up the photo and with more care opened the box wide. It held a number of photographs. Checking his feet he walked closer to the skylight. The photos were bleached of most of their colour in the gloom, but he could clearly make out the people in them.

Ian in his pram. Ian in his baby-walker. Ian kicking his first football. Kenny felt an old envy return. His aunt and uncle doted on their son and despite Vi’s best intentions and the gentle nature of her son, Kenny often felt excluded.

There were some adults in the photos as well. His Aunt Vi looking glamourous in some Seventies gear. Kenny nodded in appreciation. She was a good-looking woman. Then he spotted one where she was with another woman. Kenny looked closer. This woman could have been Vi’s twin. Her beauty shone through the aged and dull quality of the photograph. His mother.

He swallowed with the missing of her. Her lack, a squeeze of his heart, a tightness in his throat. If only. How might his life have been different if she had survived? If his father had stayed around. He closed his eyes against the emotion and damped it down. What was the use of crying over the loss now? He
’d
cried enough for two people those first few weeks in the orphanage.

Looking at the photo again, he searched her face as if it might offer up a clue. Did you really kill yourself, or were you ‘helped’ to do so? He didn’t remember her being this attractive. She was his mother; he was a just a boy and you don’t look at your mum in that way, except through the eyes of others.

He turned the photo over, looking for a date. Nothing. He contemplated keeping it. Would Colin even notice? The fact that the box wore a heavy layer of dust suggested it had been a while since anyone had been here.

There were some more photographs under that one. He plucked at one and held it up to the light. This one had a chunk torn off it. To be accurate a section had been torn off each side of the photo. Kenny could see it had once been of two couples standing side by side, but one half of each couple had been removed leaving two people standing there. His mum and his Uncle Colin.

Kenny could guess who had been torn away. The person who
’d
vandalised the scene hadn’t been too careful. Down the length of Colin’s thigh a dress jutted out; a dress he recognised from another photo as worn by his Aunt Vi.

The tear left his mum slightly apart from his Uncle Colin but the illusion might have been enough to satisfy the imaginings of a spurned lover. However, in his workings of the scene there was one other thing that Colin could not have erased. An arm and a hand was draped over his mum’s shoulder. The hand that curved round the shape of her shoulder, pulling her close, wore a large ring. A ring that Kenny remembered very well. Anybody that hurts me and mine, Kenny could hear him say while he jokingly brandished a fist in his face, gets this. It was a large, gold sovereign ring. His dad called it his knuckle-duster.

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