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Berserk
By
Tim Lebbon
CHAPTER
ONE
Ten
years after Steven's death, Tom never thought that his son
would change his life again.
Tom
held dear every precious memory of Steven, especially those
times that affected him so much that he believed they had
altered his perception of things forever. His toddler son,
pointing to the sky in wonder and gasping his first word,
Cloud! Older, learning to ride his bike, Tom letting go
and Steven only falling off when he realised he was riding
on his own. At thirteen he won a bronze swimming medal for
the school in the national finals, and the photograph of
his presentation showed a boy on the cusp of manhood, his
expression delighted yet reserved, full of self-awareness.
At seventeen Steven joined the Army, and at nineteen he
was accepted into the Parachute Regiment. Tom still had
the photograph of his son wearing that red beret hanging
above his fireplace at home. It made him proud. It made
him sad. It was the last picture he took of Steven before
he died.
Tom
sat staring into a half-empty glass, listening to the bustle
of the pub serving after-work pints and meals, wondering
whether he should go home to Jo or stay for one more drink,
and Steven suddenly popped into his mind. This often happened
- he had been their only child, and his loss had stabbed
them with a blade that time kept twisting - but mostly it
was when Tom least expected it. He blinked tears into a
blur, drained his drink and tried to imagine what Steven
would be like now, were he still alive. After ten years
in the Parachute Regiment he would have likely seen action,
either in Eastern Europe or the Gulf. He would probably
be married; he had always been one for the girls, even as
a youngster.
Maybe
Tom would be a grandparent.
"Hello,
wherever you are," he muttered as he stood and walked
to the bar. He often pictured the ghosts of those not yet
born, shades of lives unlived, and sometimes he craved to
be haunted by his own grandchildren. He hoped they would
be proud, but he thought not.
"Same
again, Tom?"
Tom
had placed the glass on the bar with every intention of
going home, but now he nodded and handed over a fistful
of change. Glass replenished, he returned to his table,
but two men had taken his place. He considered asking whether
he could join them, but the thought of entering into conversation
with strangers did not appeal to him right now. Not when
Steven was so fresh in his mind.
It's
almost ten years. He sat in the window seat close to his
original table and sipped from his pint. Ten years since
he died. Jo has changed so much in that time. Gone from
a lovely young mother into middle age barren of all but
her hollow hobbies. And I still love her. He drank again,
closed his eyes, tears threatening. She loved him too. It
was strong, their bond, and passionate, perhaps the single
positive outcome of Steven's death.
He
wondered just how much he had changed.
The
two men were talking quietly, yet Tom could not help overhearing
some of their conversation. He had never been the sort who
could shut out background noise, and even if he had no real
interest in what was being said, the words still found their
way in.
The
men were talking about their time in the Army. They looked
around thirty. Steven's age, were he still alive.
Tom
drank some more ale, already beginning to regret this third
pint. Jo knew he stopped off for a beer on the way home
every Friday. What she did not know was that he was invariably
on his own. He had led her to believe that a few colleagues
from the office went along, and that small white lie did
not bother him greatly. There was no reason to make her
think otherwise. She would only worry. And for Tom it was
just a couple of quiet pints, during which time he could
muse upon the week gone by and contemplate the weekend ahead.
He sometimes chatted to the couple who owned the pub, and
occasionally he entered into conversation with one or two
of the regulars. But more often than not this was his own
time. It was when he could really think about whether or
not he liked himself. The answers usually came in thick
and fast, and that was why he was often home after just
a couple of drinks, to immerse himself in life with his
wife once again. Smother his thoughts. Bury the aching feeling
that he should have done much, much more with a life so
scarred by Steven's death.
".
. . never knew what it was all about," one of the men
said. The other nodded meaningfully and drank from his pint.
He caught Tom's eye momentarily, then glanced away.
"Well
if he didn't know what they did there, he deserved it."
Tom
turned to the side in an effort to hear more of the conversation,
but somebody hit a jackpot on the fruit machine. The celebratory
clunking of their ejected winnings drowned the bar for thirty
seconds, and by then the two men were sitting in silence
once again.
Tom
looked around the pub and felt a familiar disquiet settling
in. He spent only a couple of hours here each week, and
yet sometimes it seemed more familiar than his own living
room. Perhaps this was the only place he ever truly relaxed.
He closed his eyes and sighed, and when he opened them somebody
said, "Porton Down."
He
looked at the two men. They were hunkered down over their
drinks, leaning in close, but they were not catching each
other's eyes. One was staring into his pint glass, the other
had found a fascinating snag of lint on his jacket sleeve.
Porton
Down! That's on Salisbury Plain where . . . Where Steven
was killed. 'Training accident', they had told Tom. When
pressed, they gave a few more details, and he had always
wished that he had not asked. And yet . . . there was that
ever-present doubt. 'Cover-up', Tom's own father had muttered
at the funeral, but he was long lost to Alzheimer's by then,
and Tom did not pursue the matter.
There
came one of those rare moments of silence that haunt bars
and wait to manifest, a brief second or two when conversations
falter at the same time, the fruit machine falls silent
between turns, the bar-staff pause for a drink or go to
change a barrel, and the juke box takes a breather between
tracks. And into that silence - still so quiet that probably
only Tom could hear it - one of the men whispered, "They
kept monsters."
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