(Part 6 again changes the angle of the piece to the newspaper men outside the station. Our latest guest piece is from a great writer called Sarah Miller who is the co author (with the equally great Melanie Rees) off Selkie Singing at the Passing Place (http://www.flapjackpress.co.uk/page10.htm). The piece below is directly set inside the world of Ghost story II. Sarah advies me it doesn't have a title and is a prose freewrite, but it's gripping stuff as i am sure you will agree.More of Sarah's stuff including her own adventures in Napwrimo can be read here https://sarahmillerwhowrites.wordpress.com/
VI
Whistle
stop the reporters
Flocked
to the scene of the crime
Scattershot
with their cameras
And
barbed, mumbling soundmen,
Circling
around the doors
Transformed
into vultures
Dressed
in designer suits
And
Barclaycard watches
Tweeting
out the same questions
Until
the air was bled dry
Clouding
the windows
Exhuming
the dead
Before
they had barely
Been
carried out of the station.Untitled
She had been trying to eat a sandwich, fighting to pull back
the plastic that sealed in the little white triangles of egg and cress. She
wasn't that keen on egg and cress but it was in the value range and she was
'coppering up' as her nan would say.
Down to the last few coins in her purse and wishing there had been
something better in the fridge to pack before she left the flat that morning.
She was now thinking it was a bad idea. She couldn't get egg on her suit. She
needed to walk into that interview looking confident and business-like and
leave with the job. She couldn't ask her dad for money again. She knew he would
give it to her, no questions asked, rip a little cheque from his cheque book...who
used cheques anymore?....and say, "Just keep at it. I know it's tough to
be young right now" and pat her hand like he did when she was ten and
worried about a maths test or a bad dream.
She heard the sound first, a sort of whistling popping
noise, then a rapid series of little thuds. On the platform, people started to
fall, hitting the concrete, staggering backwards, and then the screaming and
howling started all around her.
For some reason, at that moment, she looked up. She saw the
shape on the roof opposite, saw the gun, saw it pointing at the platform, saw
it was a man, recognised that look on his face....recognised that face. She saw
the barrel pointing at her but she kept staring. She didn't move, didn't look
away. She found she was mouthing his name, no sound coming out, just moving her
lips. Terry....Terry Lovell? That's when he started shaking, lost the cool
precision which, up till now, had been accurately hitting target after target.
Thirteen, he had shot thirteen people up to now. They hadn't done anything to
him but he needed to make the hit look random, the act of a desperate man or
even a terrorist. They were just strangers and he didn't even think about who
they were or who or what they would leave behind, they were just a means to get
the job done without detection.
Lara Beaumont, that woman with her wide eyes fixed on him
was Lara Beaumont. He had been in the room opposite in the shared house, the
second year of uni. She hadn't been in any of his classes and they weren't
close but the night when he had got back, the week he'd had to leave uni for
good, that night when his head buzzed and his thoughts tumbled in on
themselves, when he was sobbing in the kitchen, she had been there. She had
rubbed her hand up and down his back and patted his hand, telling him to
breathe, giving him water and telling him everything would be alright even when
it wasn't. She had gone with him in the ambulance, stayed with him on the ward
and even come back to visit weeks later. She had been there in front of him
when he felt like his insides had been scooped out leaving raw cavities where a
person had once lived. Now, she was there again, staring from that platform,
saying his name, the name he had left behind in that hospital with all the
vulnerability and overwhelming feelings. Seeing her made them all rush in, two
years worth of feelings all coming at once, filling every space. He was shaking
and the gun was firing wildly. Panic set in and he realised he was staggering
backwards himself, moving away from her mouth reminding him of who he was. He
pulled at the heavy door that he'd wedged open slightly, forgetting to pick up
the cartridges from the flat roof-top, not even hiding the gun. He lurched down
the stairs, his chest tightening and as he threw open the fire exit door at the
bottom and the cold hit his face like a splash of water, he could hear her
saying "breathe, it'll be alright" but he knew again that it wouldn't
be. He couldn't get enough air into his lungs, his eyes were darting around
like bullets and he wanted her to be in front of him in the back street,
rubbing his back like she had done that night but he knew she couldn't be. He
had seen the blood, blooming like two big flowers on her chest, turning her
white shirt almost completely red in seconds. She had known it was him, had still
been mouthing his name, still seemed to be looking at him when her body landed
with an inaudible thud.
you have some issues...brilliant read...captured every line as an image.
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