Attenberg
propped himself up on one elbow, squinted against the light, and surveyed the
broken furniture, bottles and cans lying around him. He could smell old urine
and gun smoke. He didn’t feel well. In fact, he felt awful. He recognised he
was lying in the wreckage of his own living room and groaned and lay down
again. Guilt and memory smashed their way to the front of his brain with their
policeman’s boots. He saw a bullet sticking out of a wall. Hilcock. Professor
Sven, bloody Hilcock. Christ, Hilcock and the others had been. This was bad. He
heard a key turn in the front door. His wife’s key.
“I hear Jean’s away?” That had been
Friday: a telephone call. Her car was literally just reversing out of the
driveway.
“It’s Jane. How did you know?”
“Me and the boys might pop over, say
hello.”
“Sven, no! You can’t, I’ve got work I’ve
got…” He was already gone.
Attenberg
was a quiet, serious man, a mediocrity. An otherwise unnoticeable face in the
crowd, he had somehow got caught up with Sven and the others at university and
it had been the ruin of him. It seemed every time he had an essay deadline or
an exam there would come a banging on the door, and there they would be,
tumbling over the threshold. Jalacy, drunk and ebullient, waving his customary
bottle of gin, Ashton, drinking and smoking God knows what, Big Tam with the
rum and always Sven, laughing and laughing and laughing. He had no idea why
they had latched onto him. They were the bigger boys, the in-crowd with the
drink and
the access to drugs and girls. They knew where the parties were and
Attenberg could no more resist than hold back the sea.
The living room door had a shotgun
blast hole in it, behind which the face of his wife appeared.
“Listen,” he began.
His father had
advised him to find a woman wo looked good when she was shouting at him.
“All that smiling doesn’t last long in
a marriage,” he’d said. This had seemed archaic thinking, even at the time, but
perhaps it had sunk in on some level.
They were bulletproof, of course, Sven &
co., top grades all over the place, careers ahead of them; that sort always
come up smelling of roses. It was as though they had alternate parallel existences
where some part of them had the time to be able to knuckle down and put the
miles in at their desks.
It was all very jumbled, they had been
high as kites when they arrived, all full of this trip they’d been on in the
Welsh mountains and Iceland. Hilcock had been banging on about trying to catch
a troll. He swore he’d actually chased one which had disappeared. The details
were hazy, but there had been a child involved, bait, probably. Hilcock had got
over excited telling the story and that was certainly when the shotgun had gone
off.
Ashton didn’t have a hair on his body,
but wouldn’t say why, just kept fiddling with the ears of the deerstalker he
was wearing. Big Tam had been holding up the Spain end of whatever had been
going on and was on his feet, shouting about some incident pulling down fir
trees and putting together flat packed furniture.
Jalacy is an Oxford man and seemed to
be keeping it together, but Attenberg remembered noticing he was the one
handing out the bottles.
This was the sort of thing they got up
to now. They’d get away with it, of course, it would be written up in some
journal and more funding would appear for the next jolly.
Smelling of roses.
Smelling of roses.
“You’ve done nothing for the meeting, I
suppose, have you?” Jane was furious, but she did look amazing. “I bet all this
started as I closed the fucking door! Do you think I work my arse off just for
you to run us into the fucking ground? Do you?”
Never work with family, that had been
the other gem. Good advice, really, but he hadn’t thought so at the time. If
she would just stop talking long enough for him to gather his thoughts and
explain. He couldn’t be held to account for what happened, not after the
tequila. Oh Christ, the tequila, he thought as memories of terrible little vignettes
flashed back to him. It was after the tequila that things had started to get
nasty. They said it was tequila, but he didn’t recognise the language on the label.
It had stunk of cactus, though.
Hilcock had some story about a UFO encounter in Wales that Attenberg had laughed at, although to be fair, no one else had believed it either. Hilcock had phoned some mountain man to corroborate, but it was the middle of the night and he couldn’t get any sense out of him. It seemed like no time passed between that and the next scene, which was Hilcock beating in his locked bedroom door, just dressed in his underpants and waving a bottle and still going on about UFOs, in between laughing and laughing. Presumably it had been around then that the shooting had started in the bathroom
Hilcock had some story about a UFO encounter in Wales that Attenberg had laughed at, although to be fair, no one else had believed it either. Hilcock had phoned some mountain man to corroborate, but it was the middle of the night and he couldn’t get any sense out of him. It seemed like no time passed between that and the next scene, which was Hilcock beating in his locked bedroom door, just dressed in his underpants and waving a bottle and still going on about UFOs, in between laughing and laughing. Presumably it had been around then that the shooting had started in the bathroom
Finally, Jane ran out of shouting and
Attenberg had some space to explain properly, but when he mentioned Sven and
the others she got upset.
“No, No! Not this.”
“They just appeared, I couldn’t stop
them! How the Hell could I get anything done in the middle of this?” He
indicated
The chaos of
the lounge. Jane continued to shake her head.
“Not this bullshit! No more!” She took
her tablet from her bag and opened a browser. She thrust it in front of his
face. Attenberg couldn’t look, he knew what was coming and his soul couldn’t bear
the weight of it. He turned his face away.
“We have security now. Cameras.”
The screen
was divided into four scenes, each representing a room in their home. A tiny,
dark figure could be seen running back and forth, appearing in one scene, then
another, then back to the first, arms flailing. One tiny figure. Just one.
“Look at it!” She wasn’t angry now, she
was crying. She held out the tablet. One of the quarter scenes was filled with
a grinning, desperate, hollow-eyed face, but Attenberg couldn’t look. He was
curled on the floor and laughing and laughing and laughing.
AA
Interesting. I think you should see more of Hilcock.
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