A Taste for Murder

SKELETON 1

I originally wrote this for a website that was being set up in Ho Chi Minh called ‘Sonder’. The website never seemed to get going and my story got ripped to shreds by the editor Brad but he did make some good points. So here is the story that was going to get published in all its post-Brad glory…

Grainy. Blurred. Too far away for details. But definitely, unequivocally, him. Racking my brains to think of when I last saw him, I finally remembered the day we picked up our A Level results. His, of course, had been four straight As (no A*s in those days), and a stellar future awaited him outside the school gates. I stood beside him picking open my envelope, dreading it really because I knew my results couldn’t possibly be as good as his and of course they weren’t. Three Bs which was fine but somewhat ‘ploddy’ as my father used to say. For some reason he always liked hanging out with me. I used to think it was because I made him feel better about himself, but now I laugh at the thought. He had been brilliant at everything he turned his hand to. What would he have gained from hanging out with a scrawny, pretty average sixteen year old like me? So I had gone along with it and for the time we’d been at school, I recall being fairly happy at being in his shadow…a little in awe of him, too. Of course, on that day, we went our separate ways at the gate; him towards Cambridge and eventually a career in law and myself towards a less than impressive establishment and then teaching.

Twenty years ago to the day.

I considered writing him, but every time I picked up a pen and letter paper (no emails then!) I thought better of it. He was at Cambridge, socialising with the best minds from the best families; what could I offer him now if I never offered him anything at all?

Picking up the Sunday Paper that bore his face on the front page, I paid and meandered slowly home, the weight of the paper heavy in my back pocket. So apparently he had been arrested the night before. For Murder. Was pleading guilty. ‘Deranged,’ according to one doctor. His terribly fashionable East London flat had been described as ‘a ghastly scene of dead bodies, body parts and blood.’  Was this the boy I watched come first in the 100m sprint on Sports Day? The boy who expertly dissected a frog in Biology (oh how grisly a memory that seemed now) and then in the same day held a charity ball in the sixth form that raised hundreds of pounds for a local hospital? As my gaze fell to the wind outside, I toyed with a fallen leaf in wonder. What must happen to a person to turn them from promising young child prodigy to heinous serial killer? What horrific things had befallen my friend to make him become this way?

Over the weeks and months that followed, his trial was screened in bars, pubs and covered the newspapers and TV headlines. I felt like I became reacquainted with my friend virtually. Eventually I admitted to myself that he had indeed caused pain and suffering to hundreds of people and didn’t appear to regret it at all. My curiosity aroused, I decided to finally make contact with him.

Having never moved in criminal circles, I wasn’t sure what to expect from the secure unit he was held in. It had been an epic task to even arrange the visit, such was his notoriety by that point, but manage it I did. Standing outside the austere high-security Ashworth Hospital in Merseyside I felt as though I were the prisoner and immediately assumed a confusing mantle of guilt, which set me wondering if prisoners themselves ever felt that way.

Walking through countless stark white corridors, the smell of ammonia was thick in my nostrils, to the point I wanted to gag. I hadn’t really been nervous about meeting him again until I found myself in that desolate place of lost souls shouting and moaning behind locked doors, and when they told me the final door directly ahead was truly the only thing between me and the man responsible for not only murdering but consuming countless animals and people…I fought the urge to turn heel and walk away.

“How are you?”

We were in a cramped room ostensibly designed to suggest alienation, however I was conscious of a thousand eyes and ears monitoring our every move via secret means. A thick pane of reinforced glass prevented us from speaking face to face properly, yet his image appeared clearly none-the-less.

“It’s been so long.”

I was unable to speak. He was mesmorising. His blue eyes were so bright and alert and in such contrast with the white clothes the nurses had dressed him in; when he smiled, his eyes crinkled and made him look so friendly. So harmless. He still had the charisma and charm that had made him irresistible as a young boy, and I fell for it all over again. I started as he moved forward to take a closer look at me. I was appalled by his eyes. What had they seen?

Limited time meant I had to find my voice and start talking if I was to ever find out what had happened to him. There was no room for pointless small talk and false niceties. So I asked him straight out. The narrative that followed was told me in as earnest a voice as one could hope for given the nature of what he was conveying, and often he would rise gracefully from his chair as he mulled over what next to disclose, sometimes picking at the paintwork in the wall, sometimes staring out to space.

“Dear friend, I do not expect you to believe all that I am about to tell you, nor am I justifying the terrible things that I have done, for that they are, but addiction too is an abhorrent predicament and I was addicted to the means of capturing a person and savouring them. It’s a powerful drug…the knowledge that once you have crossed the line between honouring the sanctity of life and destroying it, you no longer care. You’ve done it once: It can be done again, and again. Your soul is already lost.

“You may recall that when we were eight years old I was like you and, please do not take offence, I was like you in that I was average at everything. I possessed a good brain but not one that would ever make me stand out. By the time I turned nine however, my grades and reports in general were reflective of someone with an IQ and emotional intelligence far higher than the one I had originally been born with. How had I managed this? I’ll tell you.

“One weekend, my father was at home after having been away in the Lake District for work. He had brought with him venison. The meal that evening was celebratory as my father had been away for a long time; my mother was delighted to have him back and I, having never tasted venison before, was taken with the richness of the meat. You are probably wondering why I’m telling you this. I’m telling you because this was the start of it all. The following day was sports day and as usual I had to run the 100 meter sprint, something I had been dreading, as usually I came either close to the end or was the end itself. That day as I ran I remember feeling as though my legs were not my own, they seemed possessed of a natural speed and agility I had never experienced before. I came first and hadn’t even really tried! The adulation that followed made me giddy, my friend, giddy. My peers were in awe, and my House won…truly it was a wonderful day for me. As I lay in bed that night I tried to figure out what had changed, and the notion occurred that it had something to do with the deer I had consumed. I decided to experiment with my hypothesis the following morning, which was a Saturday.

“I woke up before dawn and crept downstairs before heading out into the garden. It took me a while but eventually I came across a mouse cowering in my mother’s herb garden. Grabbing an empty plant pot, I quickly placed it over the mouse, trapping it, enabling me to slip a tile beneath so I could carry the creature back into the kitchen. I knew I had to be quick so I decided to boil it first before popping it under the grill. The mouse tasted bitter and there had only been a shred of meat on its mangy bones, but I could barely contain my excitement to see if anything would happen to me the next day. Sure enough, when I awoke on Sunday morning—I never had such a keen sense of smell. The stench of life around me nearly made me vomit. My bedsheets which the day before had smelled so fresh now stank of stale boy; on the landing I could only inhale my father’s cigars and sweat whilst my mother’s perfume brought on a migraine. Although ill with the assault on my olfactory senses, and forced to lie in bed most of the day, can you imagine the thrill of discovering the secret of how to enhance your natural abilities simply by eating the flesh of one that had the preferred endowments?

“Maybe I should have been more afraid but from then on, at least once a month I would kill an animal and enjoy the feeling of being slowly refined and sculpted into something better. The length of time the effects lasted varied from animal to animal. The larger the animal, the longer the duration.  Soon, like any addict, I was hooked. It was intoxicating to have found an easy way to become brilliant. My family was happy, for I performed better academically, but of course, like so many things, it soon wasn’t enough, so I sought stronger and better means of transforming myself.  In a year I went from murdering small rodents and insects to pets (to this day our then next door neighbour has no idea that it was I that killed his pet cat, Ed, and buried his remains by his front door—a delicious irony I found quite funny for many years after) to larger animals and, eventually…humans.”

At this point he stopped and looked at me without expression. I didn’t want to catch his eye, so I picked at the skin around my thumb nail. I asked him how the transition between animal and human had been made. Turning his back to me, he laid his hands against the wall and leaned his face against the brick work closing his eyes as he remembered.

“Shortly after my 17th birthday I had an argument with a girl I was seeing at the time. You might remember her…Elise?”

I shook my head.

“I don’t suppose you would, she attended the Girls’ Grammar School across town and she was naturally brilliant. The type who could do anything. I so badly wanted to impress her, and for her to want me the way I wanted her. But when we argued, she implied that I wasn’t good enough for her! ME! With all of this newly enhanced prowess! I was so incensed I remember getting into my brother’s car in a foul rage, driving too fast and for too long out of town and off into the countryside. I was out of control, but I just could not stop myself swerving around the lanes, nearly veering into hedgerows as it was gone midnight.

“I felt like I wanted to kill myself, or destroy something, anything, and then I came around a blind corner and smacked straight into a man who had been walking back from the pub in the village. BAM! Just like that. I was so shocked I remember sitting in the car for ages in the pitch black looking at the darkened figure slumped in the road ahead of me, his grey hair lit up by the moon. Eventually I calmed down and then, like a trickle of poison, the thought crept into my mind that I could use this as an opportunity to see if the same principles that applied to animals applied to humans.

“Without truly thinking, I got out the car and dragged the man back and into the passenger seat. I didn’t really know what to do with him but eventually decided to head towards the fields where you and I had sometimes gone wild camping in the summer. It was easy enough to build a fire and, although my pocket knife wasn’t particularly sharp, I was still able to cut off his ear and roast it. The fact that I went on to kill many more people should prove to you my theory’s veracity. That man had a wonderfully keen sense of hearing. The next day I was able to differentiate between birdsongs for the first time in my life.”

“But how did you get away with it for so long though? How do you dispose of a body if you don’t eat all of it?” I asked, incredulous.

“There are two things you need to know. One, the natural cycle and order of life ensured that anything I didn’t eat and left out in the countryside would eventually be eaten by other animals or simply decompose. Second, you have to remember that I had the most wonderful façade. I was a lawyer with a first class Cambridge degree. By all accounts respectable, intelligent and with all my mental faculties in place. There would have been nothing to suspect. The only reason we are here today having this conversation is because I became blasé. The last victim escaped. Most unfortunate. She would have been better surely to have died but as it is I had only partially eaten her and she will have to live the rest of her days with the marks of my canines around her thigh…but that was her choice.”

Our time together was drawing to a close. I could see in the reflection of the security pane the guard peering through the glass panel of the door behind me.

“I don’t believe you.” I blurted out as I started to get up. “It’s all too convenient isn’t it?” Suddenly I was enraged at how easily he had clearly decided to plead insanity in order to avoid getting the judicial punishment he deserved. “You’re not insane, you couldn’t possibly gain powers from eating a person or an animal, otherwise we would all be super humans simply from buying food down at the supermarket! You are nothing but a cold blooded murderer!”

Ceasing to shout, I stood facing him as he stood facing me. There was a momentary silence and then he said softly:

“Last week, dear friend, I dined on Owl.”

The guard flung open the door as I backed away horrified at the sight of his head and neck slowly, and without expression, twisting around three-hundred sixty degrees.

Shaken, I left him there to his fate.

Lemonade

shoes    I think it was my English teacher who told us once that ‘some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them.’ Well, I don’t know about you but I would certainly categorise myself as the second. Which, rather ironically some might say, is why I’m now at this woeful comprehensive school in Northolt, Greater London and not the London Oratory where I embodied greatness…and then promptly lost it.

I can pinpoint exactly what caused this downfall akin to Caesar’s. Lemonade. Bloody lemonade. That saccharine honey dew melon coloured liquid. Nectar of the Gods. Obligatory at parties attended by over excited five year olds. I loved lemonade and for a time it loved me too. It was my business teacher, Miss. Braithwaite who first mooted the idea to my class about a project where we would be in competition with each other – not just to see who made the most money but who had the best business model, the best product and finally, the best marketing strategy. Those who were successful would be rewarded with no homework for a half term and voucher to spend at the local sweet shop. We were twelve and I immediately decided that lemonade would be the answer to the prize.

As was to be expected, people immediately threw themselves at their friends to make their groups; no thought was given to whether those people would actually be useful or make a success of it. At twelve, I already prided myself on the fact I never let my emotions get the better of me, preferring to use logic instead. So when my so called best friend John gleefully headed my way, his freckles attempting to shine through his already pimply skin – he was given short shrift. I have no idea if he looked hurt or not as I sidled my way through the tables and chairs but my thought was on one person only: Mick ‘The Almighty’ Johnson; so called for the size of his johnson which, already at the age of twelve, had the boys in the locker room green with envy. However, the epithet wasn’t just about that – it was like a metaphor for his character too – that boy was magnetic. He oozed charisma and confidence. Girls and boys listened to his opinions. Adults loved him. This was the boy, I had decided 5 minutes previously, who would help my lemonade stand march us deftly to the sweet shop and nights and weekends of freedom.

Fortunately, for me, Mick also knew a good thing when he saw it and as our eyes locked we didn’t even need to nod in acknowledgement; we just sat down, got out our pencil cases and settled to work whilst all around us people were laughing and giggling and generally, as usual, not taking life and work seriously.

Mick agreed that lemonade would be a winner. The summer term was proving humid and lunchtimes long and tedious with football games rewarded with only measly water from the communal fountain (I have never been a fan of those things and also ensured I had a disinfectant wipe handy if I got caught out and needed to use one) so to offer hot and thirsty youngsters cool glasses of lemonade would certainly secure us the prize but as I pointed out to Mick, the lemonade needed to be special – not that 7UP crap, more the ‘old fashioned’ style you could get in Waitrose.

We parted ways at the end of that lesson with not just a business plan but a fire in our bellies and ambition growing rapidly like a virus. I remember the frission of that first night all too well. Latin and R.E. homework was due the next day but I decided to forego it and sit the inevitable detention because I had greater things to focus on – namely a new formula of Lemonade. I’ve always had a flair for science so after firing up my laptop I spent a few hours looking at recipes and thinking about the chemical compounds that would work best. My dad worked in a bank and was never home until late so playing on his career parent guilt I asked for money to buy the ingredients I would need and he handed it over without question, not even looking up from his ‘The Telegraph’ as he sat slumped on the sofa, his suit crumpled and his shoes in disarray beside him.

I won’t go into the details as that would be dull but let’s just say that what followed was one of the most anti-social and delightful weekends of my life. I hid myself away in the garage and within two days had the essence of a new strain of Lemonade. It was delicious. It was refreshing. It was addictive. Mick ‘the almighty’ Johnson thought so too when I walked round the block with just a cup containing the fruit of my endeavours to let him try it. I remember him standing on the steps leading up to his front door savouring his mouthful and swirling it around his mouth like a sommelier before gulping it down.

‘Awesome’ was all he could utter before he was called back inside to wash the dog.

That was all the praise I needed. If Mick liked it, everyone would.

Monday lunchtime could not come around quick enough. Mick and I were first to the playground in order to secure our pitch by the football field and tennis courts. My sister had done a fine job creating our stand (shaped like a lemon no less) and Mick and I had changed into suitably sunshine coloured attire. Our first customer was Melanie. Or Melanie Smellanie as she was known for her inability to realize her teeth were caked in tartar and needed a good scrub. If anyone needed a pick-me-up laced with natural acid, it was Melanie.

‘How much?’ the buck toothed wench enquired.

‘80p’ was the reply.

Silver was exchanged and Melanie supped on the fruits of my weekend. Her facial expressions seemed to go through a myriad of emotions: surprise, delight and finally…relaxation as her thirst was quenched and her senses revived by the copious amounts of sugar she had just ingested.

‘Give me another 3’ she demanded.

Her request met, she sloped away towards the dingy doors that led to the girls’ toilets and we watched as she gave it to her friends; who in turn were clearly happy with the purchase as they too came up, followed by a couple of hapless boys from two years below who clearly didn’t know better than to have a crush on the three most grotesque girls in the school.

Word soon spread and by day three, our stall was swamped with youngsters vying for a taste of my luscious lemonade. The other students in our business studies class would stand glumly by their stalls selling terrible bars of soap or dry muffins to maybe one or two customers if they were lucky. As I expected, Mick and I won the task and were rewarded by being called up to the front of the classroom to receive our sweet shop vouchers and to be informed that we were not expected to hand in any homework for the rest of the term (never mind that was only two weeks). Our success wasn’t exactly met with rapturous applause by the others in the group but the rhythm seemed to match our steps as we slowly made our way back to our desks inspecting the glittering ticket to sugar joy.

The only thing was, I had kind of enjoyed selling the lemonade…and the proceeds it brought us. The task was over but the demand was not. Mick and I took to opening up a bootlegger’s business in one of the toilet stalls in the boys’ toilets – the ones in the PE block, furthest away from the staffroom and prying snooping eyes. As long as a student brought their own bottle we were happy to fill it with the lemon juice as it meant we could continue undetected.

Those were heady days bringing with them the richness of success and popularity but like so many things that one eventually equates to positive feelings, I became addicted to selling the lemonade. It got to me. The power, the monopoly of break and lunchtimes. I became a demon – always after the end result – trying to make it better, particularly when it seemed demand began to dry up as the summer dissolved slowly into Autumn and eventually the frozen wastes of winter. It was at this point I began to play around with my chemical compounds and devised a new form of Lemonade – one that heated up upon the consumer swallowing it and the liquid touching the inside of their throat. It meant people got the refreshing hit of lemons…and the warmth that made it appealing in the chilly breaktimes spent out in the granite netherland of the playground.

Business picked up and both Mick and I enjoyed the money it brought us. We were the envy of our schoolmates, always having the latest phones, trainers and clothes.

But then, as with so many things, our success came to grinding halt in the middle of March. Teachers began to complain openly that the school smelled strongly of lemons – which, although pleasantly welcome after a decade of bleach and B.O. seemed out of place and inexplicable. Then, the local papers seemed to be full of letters from residents complaining that the streetlights weren’t being turned off at night as a strange glow was keeping them awake during the hours of what was meant to be darkness. The council in turn retorted that that wasn’t the case and residents simply needed to buy black-out curtains. Tensions about strange smells and lights continued to escalate slowly for a few weeks until the day Mick ‘the almighty’ Johnson took his dog out for a walk and noticed that when Dave, as he was affectionately known as, marked his territory on trees, the urine appeared to glow ever so slightly. After returning from this particular walk in the park, Mick discovered an empty bottle of lemonade in the garage and realized Dave had drunk it all. That was also the night that Polly Barnes from year 8 got up to visit the toilet at 3am and happened to look at her reflection in the darkened mirror as she settled down onto the toilet seat. Her ensuing screams promptly brought her worried parents scampering out of bed and to their daughter’s aid only to be met with an unholy apparition of what looked to be a glowing effigy having a wee on their brand new toilet.

It quickly transpired that all those who had a lemonade habit of more than 3 drinks a week had in fact started to glow in the dark. We might have got away with it if the International Space Station hadn’t picked up the fact Harrow seemed to glow particularly brightly at night – and then some idiot scientist told the Daily Mail.

The irony wasn’t lost on me as the bitterness of my classmates spewed forth. I watched through slitted eyes and gritted teeth as I left school during those ensuing weeks when one or two of them would be pulled aside to chat to a journalist who eagerly wanted to know how he or she could get their hands on this infamous lemonade, knowing they were no doubt saying all kinds of lies just to get their names in the papers. Of course everyone knew it was me and Mick at the bottom of it all but because the stuff hadn’t been condemned as poisonous nobody could do anything about it. Except the Headteacher who called us in one Friday afternoon.

‘That lemonade is an abberation’ was how he started his tirade. We were warned never to sell it again on school grounds…on pain of exclusion. This was enough to put Mick off having anything more to do with it and I was certainly happy to stop selling it at my private school as I had discovered a new market. Teenagers from the Norwood Estate.lemonade

Never under estimate the lengths some teens will go to for a laugh. I made more in those weeks after my lemonade hit the headlines than at any other point as those over fourteen years of age would dare each other to drink 10 in an evening and then run out in front of cars to scare people or stand in cemeteries pretending to be ghosts. But then, as is always the way, their behavior got out of hand.  Somebody drowned whilst drunk on vodka and lemonade pretending to be a light house and then falling off a cliff and then a group of skinny dipping teens aiming to impersonate bioluminescence were swept away by a rip tide.

There was no escape from those last two. As soon as I saw the stories on BBC Newsnight, I knew that at the tender age of 12 ½ my foray into the world of entrepreneurial business was over. And as I suspected, come the Monday morning after the news of the deaths broke, I was summoned to the Headteacher’s office one last time.

There was no explanation that could help me now. I was told to see out the term and leave the London Oratory for good.